Angelo Barovier (,
Biographical details about Barovier are few and fragmentary, but relate his ability in the treatment of glass. The humanist Ludovico Carbone, for example, described Angelum Venetum as optimum artificem crystallinorum vasorum ( largest producer of crystalline vessels). Another testimony to the high esteem for Barovier is the decree of Venetian Republic in around 1455 that granted him the exclusive rights to production of clean glass, produced by a technique he developed, which he called Lead glass or Venetian crystal. According to some, Barovier should be recognized for originally developing a glass paste called Chalcedony.
At the request of Filaret, architect of the Dukes of Milan, Barovier was summoned in 1455 at the court of Milan in order to suggest the best glass paste to be used in the construction of Sforzinda, the ideal city desired by Francesco Sforza and designed (but never implemented) by the same Filaret.
There are no known true works of Barovier, although some historians assign him a wedding Cup in the museum of the glass Murano, the cup of birds to Trent and a blue glass in the City Museum Medieval of Bologna.
The oldest representative of the family of which we know is Jacobello (born around 1295), whose sons Antonio and Bartolomeo are mentioned in documents of 1348 as fiolari (glassmakers). A son of Bartolomeo, Jacopo, remembered as a master glassmaker and a furnace owner, was Angelo’s father. About Angelo Barovier
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