This 1979 Lalique Cristal advertisement presents the Antinea vase as a sculptural glass object, promoted through high-contrast studio photography and minimalist luxury branding.
Lalique’s late-1970s advertising positioned art glass within a gallery-style visual language, isolating individual pieces against dark fields to emphasize contour, translucence, and controlled light. Rather than showing domestic interiors, campaigns from this period treated vases as autonomous design forms, aligning the brand with contemporary decorative arts and museum-display aesthetics.
The image centers the Antinea vase against a black background, highlighting its flowing organic profile and layered green and amber tones. The brand name CRISTAL LALIQUE appears across the top in thin white lettering, with the product name ANTINEA VASE printed beneath, while small dealer and brochure text lines the lower margin. The full-page magazine ad measures 8.5 x 11 inches and uses sharp contrast and saturated color characteristic of late-1970s print advertising.
The item shown in the listing is the exact item the collector will receive. We have tens of thousands of items to choose from. Shipping will always be combined (or refunded) to save you as much money as possible. Please contact us with any questions, or visit our store page for specifics.