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France's
Baccarat Crystal--
Reality and Legend
Intro:
A visit to the old town of Baccarat, France reveals both old world
craftsmanship as well as
modern but modest working life.
The world famous Baccarat crystal is
made here by artisans using
old formulas to create great works
of art.

By Richard
Ammon
Baccarat, France
Updated June 2007
Legend and Landscape
What becomes
a legend most? Excellence? Scarcity? Expense? Good PR? Baccarat crystal,
like DeBeers diamonds, has carefully cultivated the attributes of a
legend for two and a half centuries--and with great success.
Asked to name the top few crystal makers in the world, the typical
(upscale) shopper is likely to include Baccarat. Its beautifully executed
lead crystal stemware and statuary have graced the finest salons and
tables of haute monde throughout the world in a carefully controlled
flow of superior craftsmanship and design.
As with most legends, too much reality can be a foil. The town of
Baccarat, set in the rolling green hills of eastern France, fifty
miles southwest of Strassbourg, is half-industrial and half-residential.
It'zs a polite and charming town with the requisite meandering river
flowing under an arched stone bridge that leads to an Old Catholic church.
But
the town is not part of the legend. It is sliced in half by the
Mossel River. On one side are the quiet streets and shuttered stucco
houses and little magazins for bread, meat and wine. They are
functional and comfortable but do not command any artistic or architectural
awe. It is a working class town of shopkeepers, stone masons,
railway employees and, most notably, the ouvriers de crystallerie--the
craftsmen and craftswomen who provide the stuff of the legend. Several
highways intersect here bringing in and sending out daily truckloads
of goods to the north to Saarebourg and south to Epinal. This is Alsace:
busy, unpretentious and very proudly French.
Inside the 'Crystallerie'
In
1764, King Louis XV granted the Bishop of Metz permission to establish
a glassworks in Baccarat, France. Today, after four foreign invasions
and three revolutions, the name still stands-- Compagnie des Cristalleries
de Baccarat.
The name is housed in the great hulking brick fortress that houses
the legend of Baccarat crystal. It is certainly not a legendary sight.
It is a clearly a place of work however artistic the products may be.
Inside, the labor is of sweaty men dressed in jeans pulling formless
molten glass from fiery furnaces and pressing it into precious tableware
or museum pieces.
Perhaps to sustain the legend--more probably for safety--there are
no public tours available of the extensive glasswork factory that
covers hundreds of acres. For the visitor or shopper, there are only
two partial entrees into the workings of the company: the retail
store of the crystallerie which backs up against the walls of the
factory (no discounts, no seconds, no seasonal sales), and the picturesque
old museum a few yards away from the store.
The
first impact of the crystal store is visual--it is very bright,
day and night. Crystal shows best under brilliant halogen lighting and
this is where the legend comes alive. The store sparkles with the current
assortment of Baccarat offerings: clear and colored goblets, tumblers,
pitchers, cruets, dishes, vases, decanters, perfume bottles, candelabras
and serving dishes.
There are also spectacular ornamental animal figures (horse heads,
deer heads, owls, fish) that can absorb the entire limit on most credit
cards. In one corner sits one of Baccarat's crown pieces--a round
glass top table, four feet in diameter, resting on three large crystal
leaf-shaped legs. (If you can afford it, you don't ask the price.) At
night, the whole shop glows in white light illuminating the bustle of
the main street.
Museum of Glass
The museum
is housed in an elegant 19th century manor house that was once
home to the managers of the crystallerie. It sits at the end of a long
quiet courtyard lined with company-owned row houses, each with window
shutters of a different hue, where factory workers have been housed
for a century and a half.
For
three dollars, admission is gained to the museum and here is
where the legend best shows itself in this town. The starting point
is the ten-minute video that depicts the crystal making process from
molten blob to prize statuary. It is the only view of the inside
of the factory that most outsiders can get.
Some of the most remarkable images in the documentary are the choreographic
movements of the teams of glassblowers and assistants as they
lift a red glowing bulb of glass from the furnace, turning it to keep
it from drooping. They swiftly dance through smooth motions to impress
the glass with metal rods or wooden paddles as it is rotated and
shaped on the glassmaker's chair.
If the molten form is to be hollow inside, like a bottle or vase, it
comes out of the furnace on the end of a blow-stick and placed into
a mold where it is then inflated by a barrel-chested blower into
its preliminary end-form. The balletic display of the craftsmen's motions
is clean, smooth and the result of decades of apprenticeship
in this delicate work.
According
to the other displays around the room, the ingredients in crystal
glass are very basic: silica (55%), lead (32%--too much
lead causes the glass to go green, too little and it looses brilliance
upon cutting), and potassium (13%) are mixed with diverse chemicals
(some for color) along with "groisil" (recycled crystal--imperfect
pieces are melted down rather than sold--part of the legend).
These are all baked at 1500 degrees for a calculated period of
time and removed at just the right viscosity to allow for manageable
and skillful shaping, which can take from two to several people. If
coloration is desired, certain minerals are added for particular
hues such as arsenic or iron (for yellow), cobalt (blue),
nickel (violet), manganese (rose). Uranium (not harmful)
is used to cast a blue-green tint.
Tools of the trade are also on display here. These are remarkably
few and very traditional such as the spinning rods, clippers, shaping
box, glassmaker's chair with long metal arms for rotating the rod and
glass bulb back and forth as it is hand shaped, along with various wooden
and iron molds. They look like primitive child's toys but in the hands
of skilled artisans shaped over decades of training, they produce the
wonders of Baccarat.
There
are basically two stages to the creation of each piece of crystal--the
hot work and the cold work. The mixing, melting and shaping--the
hot work-- is done at the furnace where the workers move in synch with
each other to shape the glass into designs by turning, clipping, appending,
pulling, curling or blowing the liquid into freeform sculpture. Or,
by pouring the molten glass into preset molds (which we do not see in
the video) all within a minute of birth from the fiery oven.
The cold work begins after the hot dance has given final shape
and the crystal has been allowed to cool slowly. Cold work is more individual
and meticulous, and equally as skilled as hot work. The crystal cutters
have the discretion and steadiness and priceless ability equal to a
diamond cutter.
The
cutting, frosting, or embossing of each goblet, figure or specialty
piece are done one piece at a time holding the item against diamond-studded
grinding stones that slice prism-shaped gouges into the crystal surface.
There is no margin for error. The essential part of the legend of Baccarat
is excellence so it's not unusual for a cutter to have fifteen or
twenty years' experience at a wheel.
One intriguing display presents the sequence of work stages involved
in creating a goblet step-by-step from hot blob to showcase item. A
gold-embossed frosted water goblet can involve the work of 60 people
from the point of design concept to the delivery at the showroom.
The Legend in History
Beyond
the displays of the fabrication process, the museum offers several rooms
full of the Baccarat's artistic and historic glory. Here is the
heart of the legend. Beautiful prize-winning crystal produced over the
past two centuries sparkle and impress the eye. The skill and the imagination
of the various elegant styles that have emerged over the decades have
provided the world with great works of art and practical table pieces.
Legendary
crystal for legendary people can be seen here. Kings, sultans, presidents,
ambassadors and czars from all cultures have had their Baccarat place
settings and stemware made in this town. Czar Nicholas II's engraved
and gold wineglass design appears next to the White House selection
from Roosevelt and Whitehall's choice from the Churchills.
Lining other walls are the floor-to-ceiling displays of priceless single
creations from numerous limited editions over the decades. (Scarcity
also enhances the legend.) A 1904 dragonfly, a deep cobalt-blue swan-shaped
bowl in the art deco style, and the magnificent 1937 frosted panther
designed by the esteemed Georges Chevelier are each surrounded
by other gracious and intricate masterpieces from the Baccarat artisans.
Occasionally
the designers and glassmakers like to make spectacles of their work
such as the seven-foot tall candelabra, consisting of a thousand
pieces of crystal, made for the Universal Exposition in 1878.
More recently, in 1994, another splurge of enthusiasm resulted in a
giant chandelier fourteen feet high, ten feet in diameter with
230 lights to commemorate the 230th anniversary of the original founding
of the Baccarat crystal works. This 'lustre' has 8,086 pieces of
crystal and weights one and a half tons. It is big enough to be
housed in its own display chapel across the path from the museum.
Necessities and Reality
If you
like to keep your legends pure, perhaps it's wise not to visit this
brick and stone town. You can let the art speak for itself. But if you
like the stuff of which legends are made such as the pulse of working
artisans, the homey French houses trimmed with red geraniums,
the smell of fresh baguettes, the pricey sport of French fine dining
and the dazzle of first class crystal shops (there are half a dozen
in the town)--then go and indulge in the culture and be dazzled by the
luxury and light of the crystal city.
Since Baccarat town is not really a high tourist destination
(more of a day shopping trip), there is not much preparation for tourists.
There are a couple of comfortable small hotels, a handful of local yet
tasty restaurants and a couple of dozen merchandise shops.

Otherwise, it is more rewarding to use the larger cities of Nancy
or Strassbourg as a base. Both of these picturesque cities have
far more historic and artistic attractions and are within an hour's
drive--but then again, don't have the same kind of legend.
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