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Vase

Vase

Designer: Louis Comfort Tiffany (American, 1848-1933)
Manufacturer: Tiffany Studios; Tiffany Furnaces (American)
Date: Probably 1913
Dimensions:
H: 50.9 cm (20 1/32 in.); Max W: 28.3 cm (11 1/8 in.); Base Diam: 11.7 cm (4 19/32 in.)
Medium: glass, blown and iridescent
Place of Origin: Corona, Long Island, New York
Classification: Glass
Credit Line: Gift of Helen and Harold McMaster
Object number: 1986.62
Label Text:As artist, designer, and tastemaker, Louis Comfort Tiffany altered the course of American decorative arts in many fields, including stained glass, decorative mosaic, and blown glass. Under the direction of English glassmaker Arthur J. Nash (1849–1934), the glassblowers of Tiffany’s glass company created organically inspired vessels with lustrous surfaces. The iridescent glass was produced by putting metal oxides on or in the glass and then putting the glass through an oxygen reduction process. The variation in color is the result of different thicknesses of the metallic layer. Tiffany trademarked the name “Favrile”—derived from the Latin root related to fabricating by hand—for all of the company’s glass.

Tiffany’s love for the natural world is evoked in this pansy-inspired vase. The flower’s edge is textured with fine lines and crackles that suggest living plant tissue, as the undulating surface of the trumpet shape maximizes the effects of light on the colorful iridescent glass.

DescriptionBlown and tooled into a floral form called jack-in-the-pulpit. Multihued iridescence, ranging from silvery blue and golden green to mauve and pink. Large concave button pontil applied to underside of base, in the center of which is a very round, jagged pontil mark.
On view
In Collection(s)