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The name Louis
Comfort Tiffany conjures up visions of colorful, shimmering stained
glass art to many people. These masterpieces of stained glass
appeared in Tiffany designed window panels, light fixtures, and
small glass panels. What isn't as well known was that Tiffany also
excelled in the fields of interior design and industrial design.

Born in 1848 to
the famous jeweler, Charles L. Tiffany, Louis Comfort Tiffany had
the financial means to pursue his art to his highest imagination
without having to compromise on making a profit. In 1879, Tiffany
started a firm, Louis C. Tiffany & Associated Artists along with
painter Samuel Colman, textile designer Candace Wheeler, and
artist-furniture designer Lockwood de Forest. Through this firm,
Tiffany landed diverse clients including Mark Twain and President
Chester A. Arthur. For the President, Tiffany redesigned the public
rooms of the White House.
Tiffany then went on to open his own glassmaking
company called Tiffany Glass Company in 1885 which later became the
Tiffany Studios. Based out of Corona in Queens, New York, the
studios were a shining example of a successful retailer of artwork.
Tiffany turned his designs into saleable vases, bowls, plates, light
fixtures, rugs, and furniture. Tiffany Studios produced a rare mix
of affordable art for the masses and high end artwork for the
wealthy.

In 1881, Tiffany created opalescent
glass – different colored glass fused together to create greater
hues and effects. His technique aroused the ire of the glass artist
community because opalescent glass deviated from the standard of
painting enamel on clear glass, a practice which can be traced back
to Gothic times. Tiffany went on to develop a new glass-blowing
technique of creating iridescent glass which he called Favrile or
"handmade". His Favrile vases and bowls quickly won admiration and
fans around the world.

What most people don't know about
Tiffany was that he also had a refined architectural and interior
design sense. His piece de resistance was his own home, Laurelton
Hall in New York. His ideas in integrating art, decoration,
architecture, and landscape culminated into his house. Built in
1905, Laurelton Hall graced a 600 acre waterfront estate in Oyster
Bay, nestled among Long Island's fabled North Shore.
Free
to unleash his creative desires on his estate,
Tiffany planned each room around his needs and
slowly expanded outward. Eventually his designs
culminated in an 84 room mansion built on
classical lines. Tiffany believed in developing
his designs from nature.
His
own gardens provided the inspiration for much of
the architectural details of his home. The marble
columns of his loggia are topped with yellow glass
daffodils. Glass canopies of wisteria vines
decorated his dining hall walls.

The
living room displayed his Four Seasons panels.
This artwork was exhibited first at the Parisian
Exposition Universelle and won Tiffany the gold
medal and eventually led to France awarding him
the Chevalier Legion of Honor.
The large View of
Oyster Bay panel at the Metropolitan Museum is a
view from his own home looking out towards the
Long Island Sound.
Sadly Laurelton
Hall burned down in 1957. The loggia was the only
section saved from destruction. It is now
displayed at the Metropolitan Museum's American
Wing in New York. Much of the furniture, lighting
and accessories in the house that could be saved
was collected and is now displayed at the Charles
Hosmer Morse Museum at Winter Park, Florida.

Commissioned by
churches, wealthy patrons, and other institutions,
Tiffany created many large glass panels that
usually projected his interest in landscapes and
nature. One of his famous works was Autumn
Landscape, commissioned in 1923 by Boston magnate,
Lorin Towle, for his neo-Gothic mansion.
Unfortunately, he died before the glass window was
completed and was eventually sold to the
Metropolitan Museum where many people could now
enjoy it. Besides stained glass, Tiffany also
created glass mosaics. One of the most beautiful
works of his is Landscape and Fountain, a
shimmering Favrile glass mosaic that is also
displayed at the Met.

The
Metropolitan Museum is also showing a special exhibit on his home,
Laurelton Hall, now through May 20, 2007. The exhibit can be
previewed at their Web site
www.metmuseum.org. Actual structural
components like the glass daffodil topped columns are displayed at
the show, plus other items that Tiffany collected. If you take a
careful look at these items by other artists, which include
everything from feathered headdresses to American Indian baskets and
Asian wooden doors, you can see how Tiffany was inspired by them.
Tiffany's most famous legacy to the world may be
his stained glass windows but his vision of Laurelton Hall with its
seamless integration of architecture, furniture, and accessories is
an enduring inspiration and a challenge to today's architects and
interior designers. Many designers these days are finally realizing
that without careful long-range planning of the building and its
interior components, true harmony will never be achieved.
–Janet Ramin for
Sheffield School of Interior Design |