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Vase with witch ball, New England Glass Company

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Vase with witch ball, New England Glass Company

description

Summary

Probably New England Glass Company (American, East Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1818–1888)
Made in East Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

The witch ball originated among cultures where harmful magic and those who practiced it were feared. They are one of many folk practices involving objects for protecting the household. The word witch ball may be a corruption of watch ball because it was used to ward off, guard against, evil spirits. They may be hung in an eastern window, placed on top of a vase or suspended by a cord (as from the mantelpiece or rafters). They may also be placed on sticks in windows or hung in rooms where inhabitants wanted to ward off evil. Superstitious European sailors valued the talismanic powers of the witch balls in protecting their homes. Witch balls appeared in America in the 19th century and larger, more opaque variations are often found in gardens under the name gazing ball. This name derives from their being used for divination and scrying where a person gazes into them dreamily to try to see future events or to see the answers to questions. However, gazing balls contain no strands within their interior. Glass studios traditionally make a witch ball as the first object to be created in a new studio

date_range

Date

1850 - 1874
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Source

Metropolitan Museum of Art
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain Dedication (CC0)

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new england glass company
new england glass company