Holmegaard Glass Factory, founded in 1825, was a Danish company located just outside Næstved at Holmegaards Mose, Fensmark, and one of Denmark's oldest glassworks. In 1985, it merged with the Royal Porcelain Factory, however in 1995 the packaging part – now called Ardagh Glass Holmegaard – was sold to Ardagh Group, while the art part – as the experience center Holmegaard Entertainment – went bankrupt in 2008. In 2008, the Holmegaard brand was purchased by Rosendahl A/S. In 2010, the glassworks were acquired by Sparekassen Faaborg at an auction. In 2020, the place was reopened as a museum named Holmegaard Værk, as part of Museum Sydøstdanmark. The company is known for its high-quality products of Danish design.[1]
History
Holmegaard Glass Factory is located in the town of Fensmark, in the former municipality of Holmegaard. The company was founded in 1823 after Count Christian Conrad Sophus Danneskiold-Samsøe petitioned the Danish king for permission to build a glass factory at Holmegaards Mose (lit. 'Holmegaards Bog'). He died before permission was granted. But after his death when permission was finally received his widow, Countess Henriette Danneskiold-Samsøe pursued the project, and the factory began producing green bottles in 1825, moving on to table-glass within its first decade.[2]
In 1847, Kastrup Glasværk was established by the son of the founders of Holmegaard, Christian Conrad Sophus Danneskiold-Samsøe (1800-1886). It was sold in 1873.[2]
Much of its early work was derivative and inconsequential, but between the 1930s and the 1980s, its fortunes were transformed by the designs of Jacob E. Bang (1899–1965) and Per Lütken (1916–1998).[2] Holmegaard began having artistic directors in the 1920s (unlike other Danish glassworks which did so in the 1950s), with Orla Juul Nielsen being the first in 1924 – the result of a short-term collaboration with the
Notable glassmakers at Holmegaard
- Jacob E. Bang
- Per Lütken
External links
References
- Holmegaard Glasværk Kulturarvsstyrelsen^
- Holmegaard Glasværk Trap Danmark, retrieved 9 September 2025^
- Per Lütken Lex, retrieved 9 September 2025^