Skip to main content

Bendheim Celebrates Distinction from UNESCO

Mouth blown glass

Bendheim and its partner Lamberts celebrated UNESCO’s recent announcement recognizing handmade mouthblown and rolled glass as an intangible cultural heritage of humanity.

About the recognition

UNESCO—the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization—declared handmade glass production to be an “intangible cultural heritage of humanity.” Bendheim has been the North American representative and distributor for Lamberts mouth-blown glass for more than 80 years. Its glass is used extensively in ecclesiastical, secular, restoration and historical applications.

The traditional craft of handmade glass production was nominated for the UNESCO award by Germany, France, Spain Finland, the Czech Republic and Hungary. The intangible cultural heritage of humanity includes living traditions in dance, theater, music, oral traditions, natural knowledge and craft techniques.

Restoration glass and stained glass from Lamberts have been included in a wide variety of projects, including religious buildings, airports, schools of education and historical institutions such as the White House, Monticello and Mount Vernon.

Lamberts has partnered with Bendheim since the New Jersey company was founded in 1927. Mouth-blown glass is available in hundreds of transparent and translucent colors, and offers a distinct, humanizing character. Each sheet of restoration glass is handmade utilizing centuries-old techniques and hand-selected at the factory to ensure the finest quality.

What people are saying

“We are eternally grateful for the recognition of handmade glass production as an intangible cultural heritage of humanity,” says Georg Goes from the Glashütte Baruth Museum, Katrin Holthaus from the LWL Museum Glashütte Gernheim and Rainer Schmitt from the Lamberts Glassworks. “It is a groundbreaking award for those who carry this traditional craft practice and is an incentive for us to continue to preserve this tradition and make it better known. In the coming years, we are planning international projects to maintain manual glass production together with our partners from the other applicant nations.”

“The hand and breath of the glassblower can be felt in the mouth-blown glass of Lamberts. This glass with a soul, brings its unique personality to our technology-driven world,’’ says Bendheim Partner Robert Jayson. “For nearly 100 years, Bendheim and Lamberts have worked together to bring the finest mouth-blown sheet glass to North America. We take great pride in having the ability to provide this special glass to our market.”

About UNESCO

UNESCO has been supporting the protection, documentation and preservation of living culture for 20 years. Individual elements from the national registers of intangible cultural heritage of the contracting states can be proposed for one of three international UNESCO lists. Around 700 customs, performing arts, craft techniques and forms of natural knowledge are currently on these lists. The Intergovernmental Committee on Intangible Cultural Heritage decides annually on the inclusion of new cultural forms on the UNESCO lists.

Click here to learn more about UNESCO and Intangible Cultural Heritage. Click here to learn more about Lamberts Glass from Bendheim.