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Bowl With Blue Crackle and Butterfly Design

Artist (American, 1848–1933)
Date1925
MediumGlass
DimensionsHeight: 3 1/2 inches (8.9 cm);
Diameter: 11 1/2 inches (29.2 cm)
ClassificationsDecorative Arts
Credit LineEdythe de Lorenzi Collection Bequest of Otto de Lorenzi
Terms
  • Decorative Arts
  • Glassware
  • Vessels - Bowls
  • Glass
  • American
Object number64.0879
Label CopyBRIEF DESCRIPTION This is a Tiffany bowl made from blue and white Favrile glass. If you look closely at the inside of the bowl you can see the etched image of a butterfly. WHERE WAS IT MADE? Tiffany glass was made at the Tiffany Glass Furnaces in Corona, located in Queens, New York. WHO WAS THE ARTIST? Louis Comfort Tiffany was the eldest son of Charles L. Tiffany, founder of Tiffany & Company, the New York jeweler. Tiffany was trained as a painter, studying with both George Inness and Samuel Coleman in New York and Leon Bailly in Paris. He eventually turned his attention to decorative arts and began experimenting with glass-making techniques in 1875. After success with stained glass windows and mosaics, Tiffany established the Tiffany Glass Company in 1885 and began devoting production to one-of-a-kind blown glass art objects. He soon became one of America’s most prolific designers, providing furniture, wallcoverings, textiles, jewelry and glass to some of society’s most important citizens. HOW WAS IT MADE? Notice the internal web-like pattern to the bowl. Internal designs are achieved when hot glass is inserted into a mold with ribs and then covered by another layer of glass. Air was then trapped in the impressions made by the ribs and the pattern was softened by an acid satin finish. The iridescence on this bowl is a decorative effect achieved by introducing metallic substances into the batch or by spraying the surface of the vessel with oxides like stannous chloride or lead chloride and then reheating it in a reduced-oxygen atmosphere. Ancient glass often has an iridescent appearance caused by the effects of weathering. The crackle effect on this bowl is achieved by spraying the surface with oxides or metallic substances and then reheating it, similar to the process used to achieve an iridescent effect. The bowl features a single butterfly that has been engraved into the surface. Engraving involves cutting the surface of the glass by holding it against a rotating wheel of stone or metal that is fed with an abrasive. WHY DOES IT LOOK LIKE THIS? This bowl is an example of Tiffany’s Favrile glass. Favrile is derived from the Old English fabrile, meaning hand wrought. Inspired by glass from ancient Rome and the Islamic world, Venice and Bohemia, Tiffany glassmakers copied many of the colors, texture, decoration and unique forms made long ago. Tiffany combined his talent as a colorist, naturalist, and designer with his experimentations on blown glass surfaces. Vessels were fumed with metallic oxides before firing to achieve the same iridescence found on ancient glass. To see other examples of Tiffany’s Favrile glass in the Johnson Museum’s collection, search for object numbers 57.072, 57.080, 57.088, 57.097, 57.106, 64.0840, 64.0841, 64.0842, 64.0843, 64.0850, 64.0865, 64.0875, 64.0885, 64.0889, 64.0898, 64.0904, 99.078.118 a,b, and 2001.075.003 in the keyword search box.
Collections
Vase, Gold and Blue Irridescent
Louis Comfort Tiffany
1902
Bowl, Blue Lustre, Fine Crackle
Louis Comfort Tiffany
ca. 1921
Light Blue Bottle with Pinched Sides
Louis Comfort Tiffany
ca. 1905
Bowl, Gold Lustre With Fine Crackle
Louis Comfort Tiffany
ca. 1921
Red Lustre Bowl with Crackle Effect
Louis Comfort Tiffany
ca. 1921
Vase, Iridescent With Vine Motif
Louis Comfort Tiffany
ca. 1906
Compote, Pink and Amethyst
Louis Comfort Tiffany
ca. 1960
Pair of candlesticks with Favrile glass
Louis Comfort Tiffany
before 1900
Bowl
Louis Comfort Tiffany
ca. 1921