TIFFANY, Louis Comfort
American painter and designer, son of the famed jeweller Charles Lewis Tiffany (1812-1902), who was one of the founders of Tiffany and Company. Rather than enter the family silver and jewellery business, the younger Tiffany studied painting with George Inness (1825-1894) and then travelled to Europe and North Africa. Upon his return, he became a decorator before finally setting up his own glass and decorating firm in 1879.
He is best remembered for his remarkable work with decorative iridescent glass. He began experimenting with stained glass in 1875 and co-founded a glass-making company in New York City in 1878. When disagreements between Tiffany and his partners caused the business to close in the mid-1880s, Tiffany started his own firm (later named Tiffany Studios). In the early 1890s, he created a type of glass known for its iridescent colouring, called “ Favrile,” helping him secure his status as a world leader in glass production.
Tiffany gained an international reputation through such exhibitions as the World’s Colombian Exposition of 1893 in Chicago, for which he designed a Romanesque-style chapel with glass mosaics (reconstructed at Morse Museum of American Art, Winter Park, Florida). His work was admired by the Parisian critic and dealer S. Bing, who exhibited it in his Paris shop L’Art Nouveau. In 1894-05 Bing commissioned Tiffany to make 11 glass windows (Musée d’Orsay, Paris) for the shop, based on designs by such artists as Bonnard, Maurice Denis, and Toulouse-Lautrec. Tiffany also designed several houses and apartments for himself and his family, including a studio (late 1880s) in New York with a chimney-piece that anticipated the work of Gaudí. Between 1902 and 1904, he designed his large country residence, Laurelton Hall (destroyed 1957. It was an expression of Tiffany’s eclectic interests: it combined various exotic styles in a colourful assemblage and incorporated some of his best windows, such as the Four Seasons (exhibited 1892) and Wisteria (both Morse Museum of American Art, Winter Park, Florida). Other major accomplishments of the early 20th century include a glass curtain (1911; in situ) for the Palacio de Bellas Artes of Mexico City and the Dream Garden (1915; in situ), a large-scale mosaic after a design by Maxfield Parrish for the Curtis Publishing Co. Building in Philadelphia.