Floriform vase
On View In:
Gallery 379
Artist:   Louis Comfort Tiffany
Tiffany Studios  
Title:   Floriform vase  
Date:   c. 1900  
Medium:   Iridescent blown glass  
Dimensions:   21 3/4 x 5 1/4in. (55.2 x 13.3cm)  
Credit Line:   The Modernism Collection, gift of Norwest Bank Minnesota  
Location:   Gallery 379  

Louis Comfort Tiffany is the best known manufacturer of art glass in America, a market he dominated by the early 20th century. In 1894, only a year after he opened his glass furnace at Corona, Long Island, Tiffany patented the technique of exposing molten glass to metal oxides and thus creating a colorful iridescent surface. Tiffany called this process favrile, after the Latin word faber (artisan), and it proved successful for creating realistic organic forms like this Art Nouveau vase. Here the glass is shaped in various ways to depict an Egyptian onion with an elongated plant-like stem and flower. [P]The last private owner of this vase was Edgar Kaufmann, Jr., who helped form the modern design collection at the Museum of Modern Art. Edgar Kaufmann, Sr. commissioned Frank Lloyd Wright to design his famous home, Falling Water, in southwestern Pennsylvania.

Artist/Creator(s)     
Name:   Tiffany, Louis Comfort  
Role:   Designer  
Nationality:   American  
Life Dates:   American, 1848-1933  
 
Name:   Tiffany Studios  
Role:   Manufacturer  
Nationality:   American  
Life Dates:   New York, 1885-1933  
 

Object Description  
  
Inscriptions:    
Classification:   Glass (Do Not Use)  
Physical Description:   Favrile blown glass  
Creation Place:   North America, United States, , ,  
Accession #:   98.276.190  
Owner:   The Minneapolis Institute of Arts