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- <text id=90TT1397>
- <title>
- May 28, 1990: Windows On A Nouveau World
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- May 28, 1990 Emergency!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- DESIGN, Page 76
- Windows on a Nouveau World
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A show of rare Tiffany reveals a colorist's world
- </p>
- <p>By J.D. Reed
- </p>
- <p> In 1916 Louis Comfort Tiffany threw a party for himself to
- celebrate his 68th birthday. "When the savage searches for the
- gems from the earth or the pearls from the sea to decorate his
- person," Tiffany told several hundred guests at his lavish
- studio, "he becomes an artist in embryo." That idea informs
- nearly all Tiffany's prodigious output. As decorator, craftsman
- and glassmaker, he fretted over his place in history. Was he
- embryo or master? Artisan or artist?
- </p>
- <p> The answers to those questions glow through every glass
- panel and glisten from every opalescent surface in "Masterworks
- of Louis Comfort Tiffany," an exhibition on view through Sept.
- 9 at New York City's Metropolitan Museum of Art. Tiffany expert
- and curator Alastair Duncan has assembled 72 rarely seen works
- for this spaciously mounted show: monumental stained-glass
- windows, richly patterned leaded-glass lamps, delicate
- hand-blown vases and impressionistic gold jewelry.
- </p>
- <p> At a time when craft is flourishing, and when the Bauhaus'
- straight lines have been tied in postmodern knots, Tiffany's
- plummy palate, iridescent surfaces and flowing shapes are
- attracting record museum throngs and stratospheric auction
- prices. "Masterworks" was the most popular exhibit ever at the
- Smithsonian Institution's Renwick Gallery in Washington; some
- 225,000 people visited it during its five-month stay. At
- Christie's a pond-lily glass table lamp brought $550,000, a
- record auction price for a Tiffany work.
- </p>
- <p> A well-known tastemaker in his own day, Louis Tiffany is now
- often confused with his father Charles. Charles was America's
- premier jeweler who founded Tiffany & Co., and son Louis
- (1848-1933) was born with a vermeil spoon in his mouth. Louis
- remains a shadowy figure, energetic and Victorian stolid. He
- married twice, had six children and became infatuated with
- building and decorating his 84-room mansion, Laurelton Hall,
- on Long Island. A perfectionist, he sometimes smashed work by
- his artisans that did not meet his standards.
- </p>
- <p> Tiffany trained as a painter; several of his mediocre oils
- are included in the show, testament more to his sense of
- composition than his skill with a brush. Influenced by the
- supple lines and Asian touches of the art nouveau movement, he
- did better with fabric and furniture. As an interior decorator,
- he brought exotic warmth to the drafty drawing rooms of
- Vanderbilts and Mellons. He added Moorish spice to Mark Twain's
- study, and in the 1880s swathed the public rooms of the Chester
- A. Arthur White House with such exuberance that one critic
- compared the ambiance to "steamboats and barrooms." (Theodore
- Roosevelt later restored colonial austerity.)
- </p>
- <p> Stained-glass windows, at first merely a part of decor, soon
- became an obsession into which Tiffany poured his talent and
- technical brilliance. He explored luminescence and color in his
- windows with an intensity that would credit a modern painter.
- Instead of using lead cames, or frames, at regular intervals,
- as glassmakers had done for centuries, he incorporated the
- metal strips into the design, as outlines for trees and
- riverbanks. His vision was limited by the few kinds of glass
- commercially available, so he invented and patented his own
- brand, called Favrile glass. By 1900 he boasted that he could
- call on 5,000 colors and effects to reproduce "the vast,
- teeming bosom of nature."
- </p>
- <p> The twelve windows represented in "Masterworks" pulse with
- a colorist's verve and ingenuity. Here are familiar nouveau
- nature themes: profusions of rowdy blooms and bursting vines,
- roe deer and sailboats bobbing on azure seas. In the 9-ft.-tall
- Cockatoo and Parakeet, a bird with opalescent feathers pecks
- at vibrant cherries. In the magnificent Landscape Triptych,
- Tiffany played with shade and light in a glade to produce
- landscape poetry worthy of the Hudson River school of painting.
- Vase of Red Peonies, dominated by a glorious clot of blossoms,
- prefigures abstraction.
- </p>
- <p> The 17 leaded-glass lamps displayed in "Masterworks" radiate
- a ragtime glow--magnolias, maple leaves, dragonflies and
- cobwebs are set atop finely wrought bronze bases. Viewed
- together, however, they overwhelm a modern eye, a sort of
- kaleidoscopic overdose. Tiffany would perhaps have been
- embarrassed by such a showing of his lamps. He considered them
- rankly commercial and beneath his talents. They were, however,
- a convenient way to use up the several tons of glass chips and
- shards remaining from his monumental windows. At his 68th
- birthday party, where more than 160 examples of his art were
- displayed, Tiffany exhibited only one lamp: a unique
- construction in which a golden glass globe is supported by
- shimmering enameled copper peacock heads. Still, the
- leaded-glass lamps became best sellers and were turned out by
- the hundreds, peaking in popularity between 1904 and 1912.
- </p>
- <p> Despite such success, however, red was the color of
- Tiffany's balance sheet. He simply spent more on materials and
- manpower than he earned in sales and commissions. Every year,
- thanks to the largesse of his wealthy family, he wrote a check
- to cover the shortfall, and went on making magnificent windows
- and exquisite vases. It sounds like something an artist might
- do.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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