Tiffany art exhibit on display

The Island Now

Tiffany Studios, New York: Daffodil Table Lamp. c. 1900-20.

The Heckscher Museum of Art recently launched a new exhibit, The Age of Tiffany: Between Nouveau and Deco, which will be on display through Sunday, July 22.

The years preceding and following the turn of the 20th century witnessed a revolution in the decorative arts in America. In an era when many traditionally trained painters and sculptors collaborated on decorative schemes for grand public buildings, other artists created functional objects for the home that were notable for their aesthetic appeal.

Tiffany Studios, New York: Vine-Covered Cross. ca 1910.

Louis Comfort Tiffany was the central figure in this movement. Renowned for the ground-breaking glass processes he developed, Tiffany produced countless decorative windows, stained glass lamps, and opalescent and favrile glass vases and bowls.

This exhibition places Tiffany within the context of other decorative art from the museum’s permanent collection, including garden sculpture by Frederic MacMonnies and Edward Berge, a decorative panel by Charles Prendergast, a rare tapestry by Arthur B. Davies, and a modernist rug by Bertram Hartman. The installation also features work by Enid Bell, Max Kuehne, Paul Manship, Hunt Diederich, and Henry Varnum Poor, among others.

Tiffany Studios, New York: Glass Vase. ca 1900-1912.

To view the new exhibit, head to the Heckscher Museum of Art, located at 2 Prime Ave. in Huntington. For more information about this and other exhibitions and events, go to www.heckscher.org.

 

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