Cristallo Venezia CCC (Murano, Italy)
Cristallo Venezia CCC was a mid-century Italian art glass manufacturer based on the island of Murano. Operating primarily during the 1950s and 1960s, the company is widely considered a "ghost factory" within the glass collecting community. With no surviving factory records, known closing dates, or master glassblowers (maestri) definitively tied to the studio, their history has been pieced together entirely by collectors from surviving items.
The company's production is best known for heavy, sculptural centrepieces and bowls featuring sweeping, biomorphic forms. They frequently utilised the sommerso technique, layering vibrant, contrasting colour gradients within thick, glossy walls of clear crystal. Unmarked pieces are most often identified by the maker's most iconic design signature: a distinct, heavy, star-shaped base.
Pieces are authenticated by their original gold and silver foil stickers, which typically read 'Cristallo Venezia' above a rectangular banner containing the letters 'CCC'. Interestingly, pieces from the same kilns are frequently found bearing an 'Artistica Murano' label with an identical 'CCC' banner.
Under this alternate label, the studio produced a highly collectible series of mid-century fish table lamps, often featuring gold flakes (avventurina) in the glass. Despite the studio's lost history, these lamps were widely distributed across Europe by the prominent Belgian lighting company Massive, proving the maker achieved significant commercial success during the mid-century glass boom before vanishing without a trace.
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