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Tuesday, November 19, 2013

POSITIVELY TIFFANY

by Mauverneen


Somehow, I just never put the two together. Tiffany Jewelers, Tiffany glass. They are Father and son.

Tiffany vase

The father, Charles Lewis Tiffany started out with a small stationery store/gift shop in New York. Several years later he and his partners had earned a reputation for selling only the finest of goods and began manufacturing jewelry. Becoming Tiffany and Company, they opened branch stores in London and Paris. The very name - Tiffany’s - has since become synonymous with fine jewelry. (An interesting sidenote on Charles: he teamed up with Thomas Edison to create footlights and other means of lighting theaters, thus enabling patrons of the day to further enjoy the theater.)

Stained glass window
 
Lewis Comfort Tiffany was one of six children. Interested in art and painting, he became enamored with colored glass on a visit to a London museum. Glass making hadn’t changed much over the years and Lewis Tiffany, an interior designer, wanted to use colored glass in his designs, rather than painting on clear glass, which was the established method. He invented, and patented, a technique called favrile glass, an iridescent art glass – a term he later applied to all his techniques. (Drapery glass is manipulated while the glass is molten to simulate folds in fabric, adding a three dimensional aspect.  Plating is using multiple layers of glass to create depth.)
'River of Life' L C Tiffany stained glass window
Tiffany believed in creating 'functional art' - pieces that were not only useful, but were also a pleasure to look at. On the other hand, he also created art for art's sake. His flowerform vases for instance, were designed not necessarily to hold flowers, but to be the flowers. In 1900 at the Paris Exposition - the World’s Fair that introduced escalators and talking films - Tiffany won a gold medal for his stained glass windows, The Four Seasons.
 
'Lily' lamp
The shape resembles a plant, with the glass shades being the flowers.
Functional art for the up and coming invention of electricity

Art Nouveau was the fashion and the pieces coming from the Tiffany factory, notably the lamps, reflected the style. Some of those designs however, came not from the mind of Tiffany himself, but from his design studio, where he employed as many as 300 people in his studios and factory. Recent documentation is crediting Clara Driscoll, a talented, creative woman, for some of those designs, including the popular Dragonfly, Peony, and Daffodil lamps. Clara worked for Tiffany for 20 years, as a designer and head of the "Tiffany Girls" ( the Women's Glass Cutting Department). A widow when she was hired, she was forced to 'retire' upon her second marriage as married women were not allowed to work there.

Daffodil, Peony, and Dragonfly lamps
Now known to have been designed by Clara Driscoll. Shades could be used on various bases - either electric or kerosene.
Note the wide bases - not easily tipped over.


Some 60 pieces of Tiffany designed windows, lamps and assorted art objects are currently on exhibit at the Driehaus Museum in Chicago. Louis Comfort Tiffany: Treasures From the Driehaus Collection is the crème de la crème of a private collection of 1500 pieces.  It is wonderful to see these pieces displayed in a setting from the era they were designed in and for.  Elsewhere in Chicago, Navy Pier has a permanent, free exhibit of stained glass, which also includes some pieces from that collection.  The newly renovated Queens museum in New York has a permanent Tiffany collection and The Morse Museum in Winter Park, FL has a Tiffany Wing which features some 250 salvaged art and architectural objects from Louis Comfort Tiffany's fabulous Long Island estate, Laurelton Hall, which was tragically destroyed by fire in 1957.  Included in their collection is the Tiffany Chapel, designed for the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago and reassembled at the museum after a number of moves.


Nautilus Lamp
An intriguing piece. The individual 'shells' of the base could be removed and used separately as vases.
Although the shade looks like glass, it is actually made of pieces of shell.
 
If you think you’d like to collect a little Tiffany, be forewarned. There are lots of imitations and copies out there, not to mention reproductions and 'Tiffany-style' and not all original pieces were signed. Do your homework, go through an established, reputable dealer, and if you do find a genuine Tiffany piece - Enjoy it. Just don't forget the insurance.




You can read more about the Driehaus Museum on my previous blog.

As always, words and photos are my own, and require permission to reprint.
However, feel free to share the blog in it's entirety. In fact, I encourage it!
 
Interested in photo prints? Contact me! maureenblevins@yahoo.com
and visit my website: http://mauverneen.com
 

1 comment:

  1. Great post Maureen - "Positively enlightening"!
    I long for a Tiffany piece now.
    ~Phyllis~

    ReplyDelete