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Tiffany Floriform Vase 1903 signed

SKU 296

Tiffany Floriform Vase, Tiffany Studios New York, 1903, signed

  • Height: 30.5cm, Width: 16.5cm,
  • 1903
    Epoch: Art Nouveau
    Technique: Glass, mouth-blown, colored, iridescent; Favrile-technique

    Signed with “T3245” (1903) and “L.C.T.” for Louis Comfort Tiffany;
    Bib.: comp. similar model in Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (ed.), “Tiffany Glass – a passion for colour”, no. 79, p. 130

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    SKU 296
    Description

    The company Louis Comfort Tiffany was one of the most important and most famous art manufactures in America around the turn of the century. Alongside the famous lamps and leaded glass mosaic shades, the glass objects are among the most important objects produced by Tiffany in New York.
    Vases of the “Floriform” type range among the most desired glasses, as they were complicated to produce and therefore very expensive even around 1900. Tiffany pieces were often inspired by floral motives. In this case it depicts a stylized blooming flower.
    The vase is signed with “T3245” (1903) and “L.C.T” for Louis Comfort Tiffany.

    Artist

    Louis Comfort Tiffany (New York 1848 – 1933 New York) was a famous American designer, artist and painter of American Art Nouveau. He was best known for his works in glass colored with metal salts and made a name for himself in the decorative arts at the time. In the course of his career, he created a unique style that combined outstanding craftsmanship with a love for natural shapes and bright colors. Nature had always been his inspiration and in his designs he tried, in his very own way, to capture its beauty forever. Tiffany designed lamps, glass mosaics, lead glass windows, glass vases, ceramics, jewellery, enamel and metalwork. Among the highlights of his work were countless high awards, including a Grand Prix at the 1900 Paris World Exhibition and his life's work “Laurelton Hall”, an 84-room home for his family in Long Island, New York.

    Execution

    In 1880, Louis Comfort Tiffany founded the "Associated Artists", in partnership with Lockwood De Forest, specialist in furniture and woodwork, Candace Wheeler, designer and textile specialist, and the painter Samuel Colman. The partnership has produced all kinds of decorative objects, including lighting, flooring, windows, mosaics and furniture. Together, the members of this partnership decorated many famous homes and buildings, including Mark Twain's home in Hartford, the former White House lobby, and the Veterans Room in the Park Avenue Armory. Later, Tiffany built large workshops with glass furnaces in Corona in Queens, New York. Together with Arthur Nash, a trained master glassmaker from Stourbridge, the desire grew to concentrate on glass art. These efforts led to the dissolution of the "Associated Artists" in 1885. In the same year, Tiffany founded his own glassmaking company, the "Tiffany Glass Company", which became known as "Tiffany Studios" in 1902. There, the high-quality glass products, for which Tiffany became so famous, were designed and produced under his own strict supervision and high quality standards. The Tiffany Studios in New York closed in 1930, three years before L. C. Tiffany's death.

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    Tiffany Floriform Vase 1903 signed

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