From Patrician residence to a museum: Palazzo Giustinian shares the fortunate fate of many other aristocratic Venetian dwellings, with one important difference.

It is located in Murano, an island renowned throughout the world for the excellence of its glass-making tradition. The museum in question is the Glass Museum, which, after finding permanent home in 1861 amidst the frescoed rooms of the former diocese of the archbishop of Torcello, has continued to expand.

A large number of antique and contemporary glass pieces, donated by Murano-based glass factories, were added to the original archives. The museum’s collection was further enriched by glass objects from the Correr, Cicogna and Molin collections, which include several beautiful Renaissance pieces as well as an archaeological section. The items displayed are arranged chronologically starting from relics dating back to Roman times (1st/5th centuries A.D.). The permanent exhibition explores seven hundred years of the history of Murano glass, with pieces produced from the 4th century up to the present, when the appeal of glass as a medium of expression became one of the themes of experimentation and a privileged tool of interpretation used by many artists and designers.