Amalric Walter

[2] He was impressed by the pâtes de verre of Albert Damousse and Henri Cros who received the Gold Medal of the 1900 World's Fair.

[2] He then decided to work for the Cristalleries Daum at Nancy, France, from 1904 or 1905, where he stayed until the first World War in 1915.

He help decorating the living room of the Maison Losseau in 1911 with 15 pâte de verres representing the Belfry of Thuin and the river Sambre.

[6] The Amalric Walter Research Project was launched in 2006 by Keith Cummings and Max Stewart in Dudley, England.

[7] At the same time an exhibition on Walter's pâtes de verre was held at the Broadfield House Glass Museum.

Vase au lézard, c. 1925, h: 21 cm
Poisson art deco, c. 1930