Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Glass, Room 131

Hoop

Vase
ca. 1966 (designed), 1967 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

In January 1967 Whitefriars launched its revolutionary new textured range at the Blackpool Fair and later in the year at the Design Centre in London. The series of mostly vases of which the Hoop vase was one of the most striking designs, was a new departure for Whitefriars. Their irregular shapes, rough textures and bright, non-primary colours, brought an entirely new aesthetic to British glass, which was at that time still dominated by soft, rounded, smooth blown shapes. The same approach to shape and surface treatment can be found in contemporary sculpture, architecture and other 3D design of the period.

Geoffrey Baxter produced the original moulds for this range at home in his garage, using carved wood and even tree bark. Once complete, the multi-part wooden moulds were translated into durable metal versions.
The original, wooden two-part mould for the Hoop vase was made up of different sections of different diameter, stacked off-centre in an irregular way. A 'staged' photograph of the time shows Geoffrey Baxter carving surface detail directly into the wooden mould for the Hoop vase.



Object details

Category
Object type
TitleHoop (manufacturer's title)
Materials and techniques
Mould-blown, cased glass
Brief description
Vase, mould-blown, made in colourless and cinnamon-brown glass, irregular cylindrical shape with rough-patterned surface, Geoffrey P. Baxter, London, 1967
Physical description
Vase, mould blown, made of an inner layer of smokey-brown glass cased in a thick layer of colourless glass; the overall shape is cylindrical and the central section is shaped like roughly-stacked disks of different diameters; the rough surface texture is akin to the bark on a tree.
Dimensions
  • Height: 28.7cm
  • Greatest width: 12.4cm
  • Mouth diameter: 8.1cm
Object history
This vase is said to have been given to its previous owner for Christmas 1967, the year in which this design was launched.
Production
The new, textured range of Whitefriars glass, of which the hoop vase was part, was officially launched in January 1967.
Summary
In January 1967 Whitefriars launched its revolutionary new textured range at the Blackpool Fair and later in the year at the Design Centre in London. The series of mostly vases of which the Hoop vase was one of the most striking designs, was a new departure for Whitefriars. Their irregular shapes, rough textures and bright, non-primary colours, brought an entirely new aesthetic to British glass, which was at that time still dominated by soft, rounded, smooth blown shapes. The same approach to shape and surface treatment can be found in contemporary sculpture, architecture and other 3D design of the period.

Geoffrey Baxter produced the original moulds for this range at home in his garage, using carved wood and even tree bark. Once complete, the multi-part wooden moulds were translated into durable metal versions.
The original, wooden two-part mould for the Hoop vase was made up of different sections of different diameter, stacked off-centre in an irregular way. A 'staged' photograph of the time shows Geoffrey Baxter carving surface detail directly into the wooden mould for the Hoop vase.

Bibliographic references
  • Jackson, Lesley (ed.), Whitefriars glass: The Art of James Powell & Sons, Shepton Beauchamp, 1996, pp.88-91, p. 139, P. 159 for a discussion of this design and its significance.
  • Wolfie Rayner, 'Whitefriars 'Fakes': part 1', in: The Glass Cone, 101 (Winter 2013), pp. 4-5, discusses fakes of the Hoop Vase and related Whitefriars vases.
Other number
9703 - Glass gallery number
Collection
Accession number
C.8-2012

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Record createdJuly 2, 2012
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