A depiction of Saint Mark’s Basilica (Venice) is beautifully made up in a glass nicromosaic at the Corning Museum of Glass, Corning, New York.
This may be the largest Venetian micromosaic in existence. It measures five by seven feet, and it weighs one ton. As a rule, micromosaics are small works that emphasize detail; rarely do they exceed the size of a modest painting. This panel depicts Venice’s Piazza San Marco and its basilica. It provides an almost photographic record of the mosaic decoration on the basilica’s facade as it existed at the start of the 20th century. The panel is signed by the mosaicist E. Cerato, and it was on display in the store of the glass company Pauly & C. at the Piazza San Marco until the late 1950s. Developed in Italy during the late 18th and early 19th centuries, the micromosaic technique made use of minute tesserae of colored glass that were arranged to create painterly effects. These tesserae were cut from thin opaque glass rods, of which there were more than 20,000 different tints.

Saint Mark’s Basilica in Glass
The zoomed in image shows the various pieces of glass that were used to make up this masterpiece

Saint Mark’s Basilica in Glass Detailed

Saint Mark’s Basilica in Glass Detail