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40 of 141

Louis Comfort Tiffany

(American, 1848–1933)

Opalescent vase with gold lustre interior

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Object Details

Artist

Louis Comfort Tiffany

Date

ca. 1921

Medium

Glass

Dimensions

Height: 10 1/2 inches (26.7 cm)
Diameter: 4 inches (10.2 cm)

Credit Line

Gift of Louis Comfort Tiffany through the courtesy of A. Douglas Nash

Object
Number

57.080

BRIEF DESCRIPTION
This is a Tiffany vase featuring diagonal orange and white striped decoration.<(…)

BRIEF DESCRIPTION
This is a Tiffany vase featuring diagonal orange and white striped decoration.

WHERE WAS IT MADE?
Tiffany glass was made at the Tiffany Glass Furnaces in Corona, located in Queens, New York.

WHO WAS THE ARTIST?
Louis Comfort Tiffany was the eldest son of Charles L. Tiffany, founder of Tiffany & Company, the New York jeweler. Tiffany was trained as a painter, studying with both George Inness and Samuel Coleman in New York and Leon Bailly in Paris. He eventually turned his attention to decorative arts and began experimenting with glass-making techniques in 1875. After success with stained glass windows and mosaics, Tiffany established the Tiffany Glass Company in 1885 and began devoting production to one-of-a-kind blown glass art objects. He soon became one of America’s most prolific designers, providing furniture, wallcoverings, textiles, jewelry and glass to some of society’s most important citizens.

HOW WAS IT MADE?
Like most Tiffany vases, this vase was created using a blowpipe. This vase is made of opalescent glass, a type of 19th century glass made by covering a gather of molten colored glass with a layer of colorless glass containing bone ash and arsenic or the mineral cryolite, from Greenland. The shiny gold luster on the inside of the vase is the result of a type of staining technique. The surface of the vessel was painted with metallic oxides dissolved in acid and mixed with an oily medium. The vessel is then fired in an oxygen-free environment at around 1150 degrees Fahrenheit which causes metal to deposit a film that when cleaned, becomes shiny.

WHY DOES IT LOOK LIKE THIS?
This vase is an example of Tiffany’s Favrile glass. In 1894, Tiffany patented his iridescent glass under the name Favrile. The word Favrile is derived from the Old English fabrile, meaning hand-wrought. Tiffany design was inspired by glass from ancient Rome and the Islamic world, Venice and Bohemia. Tiffany combined his talent as a colorist, naturalist, and designer with his experimentations on blown glass surfaces. Vessels were fumed with metallic oxides to achieve iridescence.

To see other examples of Tiffany’s Favrile glass in the Johnson Museum’s collection, search for object numbers 57.072, 57.088, 57.097, 57.106, 64.0840, 64.0841, 64.0842, 64.0843, 64.0850, 64.0865, 64.0875, 64.0879, 64.0885, 64.0889, 64.0898, 64.0904, 99.078.118 a,b, and 2001.075.003 in the keyword search box.

This vase is representative of Tiffany’s Art Nouveau style objects. Art Nouveau, French for “New Art,” refers to an artistic style that was developed in Europe in the 1880s, and remained enormously popular into the first decade of the 20th century. It is characterized by whiplash curves, organic imagery and sinuous lines. The name Art Nouveau came from the Paris shop of Siegfried Bing that opened in 1895, quickly popularizing the works of artists like Louis Comfort Tiffany, whose work became synonymous with (or symbolic of) the American Art Nouveau style.

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