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IG_373: Replica of stucco and glass window with circle and flower ornamentation
(AUT_Wien_WienMuseum_IG_373_1)

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Title

Replica of a stucco and glass window with circle and flower ornamentation

Type of Object
Dimensions
62.2 x 66.5 cm (entire panel including ornamental border on three sides); 40.5 x 28 cm (floral ornament in centre).
Artist / Producer
Place of Manufacture
Dating
1901
Location
Inventory Number
HMW 239702/23
Research Project
Author and Date of Entry
Francine Giese, Sophie Wolf 2025

Iconography

Description

Wooden latticework replicating two identical stucco and glass windows. The design consists of symmetrically arranged ornamentation of alternating rows of circles and flowers. Two vertical and two zig-zag lines in blue form a geometric network. The ornamentation is framed by an ogee arch. Stylizised six-petalled flowers in red adorn the spandrels. A frame with alternating circles and rectangles surrounds the composition.

Iconclass Code
48A981 · ornament ~ geometric motifs
48A98131 · ornament ~ circle and derived from circle, e.g.: guilloche
48A983 · ornament derived from plant forms
48A9833 · flowers ~ ornament
Iconclass Keywords

Materials, Technique and State of Preservation

Materials

Wood (maybe beech plywood); colourless sheet glass; grisaille, silver stain, red and blue enamel.

Technique

Rectangular wooden latticework backed with enamel-painted sheet glass. The latticework has an average thickness of 8–10mm and is painted with brown paint and varnish.

The rectangular glass sheet is not attached to the grille, but loosely placed behind; it is held in place with wooden strips. The glass is 1.5–3mm thick and has an uneven surface. The glass shows spindle-shaped, parallel bubbles typical of broad-sheet glass.

The motif is painted on the front of the glass. Black glass-paint (or enamel) was used for the contour lines, red and blue enamel for the flower and the vase. To achieve the green in the leaves of the carnations, silver stain (applied on the back) has been combined with blue (applied on the front). Silver stain – again applied on the back – has also been used to enhance the colour of the red enamel.

A white wash was applied on the colourless background below the decorated panel; the wash is stippled in places.

State of Preservations and Restorations

Good state of preservation

History

Research

The design of the two panels of this replica differs significantly from Islamic stucco and glass windows, despite the symmetrical arrangement of the individual elements (circles, flowers, interlacing). The most significant difference however, when comparison is made with examples from the Ottoman Empire, is the use of wood instead of stucco for the latticework. A similar material transfer from stucco to wood can be observed in the windows designed by the British architect William Burges (1827–1881) for the Arab Room of Cardiff Castle in Wales (IG_484IG_487). Like these windows, the replica discussed here, as well as four similar replicas in the Wien Museum collection, was executed in a local (Austrian) workshop.

While William Burges was drawing on his first-hand knowledge of Islamic stucco and glass windows acquired during his journey to Turkey in 1856/1857, the unknown designer of this and the four other replicas took the windows of the Arab Room of the k.k. Österreichisches Museum für Kunst und Industrie in Vienna (today the MAK – Museum für angewandte Kunst) (IG_264) as a direct model. These windows were designed by the Bohemian architects František Schmoranz (1845–1892) and Johann Machytka (1844–1887) and made between 1881 and 1883.

As in the MAK windows, the lattice of this later replica was not backed with individual pieces of colourless and coloured glass, but by a single colourless glass sheet on which the main lines of the decoration were painted in enamel colours. It is therefore the third link in a chain of reception that goes back to the stucco and glass window OR 3606 (IG_360), held today at the MAK, which was transferred from the collection of the Orientalisches Museum in Vienna (from 1886 the Handelsmuseum) to the k.k. Österreichisches Museum für Kunst und Industrie in 1907.

On display until 1931, Schmoranz and Machytka’s Arab Room can be considered an important reference point for Austrian architects and patrons, among them the entrepreneur Anton Johann Kainz-Bindl (1879–1957). The latter travelled to the East shortly after marrying Maria Russleitner in April 1900. Together, they visited Egypt, the Near East, Turkey, and Bulgaria and acquired various art objects during their journey. To present them in a suitable setting, Kainz-Bindl had an Arab-style interior installed on the mezzanine floor of the four-storey residential and commercial building that he had erected at Währinger Gürtel 166 after plans by the Viennese architects Dehm & Olbrich. Construction work started in the spring of 1900, and the Arab Room is dated 1901 (Architektonische Rundschau, 1902, p. 71; Orosz, 2021, pp. 98, 104). With the installation of an Arab Room, Kainz-Bindl was following a trend that had become established not only in aristocratic circles, but also among the wealthy bourgeoisie, who, like the nobility, wished to present their artefacts in a specially designed Islamic-style room, thereby showcasing their cosmopolitanism (Giese, 2016; Giese, 2019).

Kainz-Bindl’s Arab Room has an area of c.30m2 and is lined with wooden panelling 2.20m in height with cabinets, shelves, and cupboards for displaying Islamic objects, as well as a bay with a Secessionist entrance arch and custom-made mashrabiyyāton three sides housing five replicas of stucco and glass windows at the top (IG_371IG_375, see also Linked objects and images, dimensions according to Orosz, 2021, p. 104). The wooden panelling was made by Portois & Fix, a company founded in Vienna in 1881 and specializing in furniture and interior design (Orosz, 2021, p. 105). It is therefore possible that the mashrabiyyāt and the wooden lattices of the windows were produced by the same firm.

The replica discussed here was originally placed in the centre of the main side of the bay window, opposit the entrance arch. It was framed by two identical replicas with flowers in a vase (IG_371, IG_372), in order to respect the disposition of such windows in traditional Islamic interiors, where a central panel is usually flanked by two identical in composition to each other (see for instance IG_118, IG_119, IG_449).

The Arab Room remained unchanged in the patron’s family for over 100 years. It was then acquired by the Wien Museum from the Viennese jewellery and enamel artist Ulrike Zehetbauer (born 1934), the wife of Kainz-Bindl’s grandson, in 2015. In 2017, it was displayed in the exhibition ‘ISLAM in Österreich – Eine Kulturgeschichte’ at Schallaburg Castle (Schollach, Austria). The bay window with its five replicas has recently been reintegrated into the permanent exhibition of the Wien Museum, which reopened in 2023 at its new location on Karlsplatz in Vienna (Orosz, 2021, pp. 98–99).

Dating
1901
Place of Manufacture

Provenance

Owner
Since 2015: Wien Museum, Inventory Number: HMW 239702/23, Vienna (Austria), Purchased
Previous Owner
until 2015: Zehetbauer, Ulrike, Vienna (Austria), Bequest. year of acquisition unclear
From 1901: Kainz-Bindl, Anton Johann, Vienna (Austria), Purchased. year of transfer uncertain

Bibliography and Sources

Literature

Anon. (1902). Wohn- und Geschäftshaus Währingergürtel 166 in Wien, Architektonische Rundschau, 18(9), p. 71.

Giese, F. (2016). From Style Room to Period Room: Henri Moser’s fumoir in Charlottenfels Castle. In: S. Costa, D. Poulot, & M. Volait (Eds.), Period rooms. Allestimenti storici tra arte, gusto e collezionismo: Atti del Convegno Internazionale, Bologna, 18-19 aprile 2016 (pp. 153–160). Bologna: Bolonia University Press.

Giese, F. (2019). International Fashion and Personal Taste: Neo-Islamic Style Rooms and Orientalizing Scenographies in Private Museums. In F. Giese, M. Volait, & A. Varela Braga (Eds.), À l’orientale: Collecting, Displaying and Appropriating Islamic Art and Architecture in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. Arts and Archaeology of the Islamic World, 14 (pp. 92–110). Leiden/Boston: Brill.

Orosz, E.-M. (2021). Das "arabische Zimmer" im Wien Museum. Aspekte des Orientalismus im Wiener Bürgertum. In: M. Hartmuth & J. Rüdiger (Eds.), Gezimmertes Morgenland. Orientalische und orientalisierende Holzinterieurs in Mitteleuropa im späten 19. Jahrhundert Phänomenalität, Materialität, Historizität (pp. 97–107). Wien: Böhlau.

Exhibitions

18.03. – 05.11.2017: ISLAM in Österreich – Eine Kulturgeschichte, Schollach (Austria),Schallaburg · since 2023: permanent exhibition, Vienna, Wien Museum

Image Information

Name of Image
AUT_Wien_WienMuseum_IG_373_1
Credits
@ Wien Museum, Foto Birgit und Peter Kainz

Linked Objects and Images

Additional Images
Arabisches Zimmer, Währinger Gürtel 166
Replica of stucco and glass window with circle and flower ornamentation
Replica of stucco and glass window with circle and flower ornamentation

Citation suggestion

Giese, F., & Wolf, S. (2025). Replica of a stucco and glass window with circle and flower ornamentation. In Vitrosearch. Retrieved December 5, 2025 from https://www.vitrosearch.ch/objects/2713217.

Record Information

Reference Number
IG_373