Item# MM80-013623
$78.00 $69.95
Louis Comfort Tiffany (American, 1848 - 1933) was one of America's most noted decorative artists at the turn of the twentieth century. He designed the brilliant five paneled Magnolia window (ca. 1885) for the Tiffany mansion at 72nd Street and Madison Avenue in New York where it was placed in the grand library. Divided by heavy leading, the window includes sections composed of graceful blossoming branches with pearly leaves and yellow and silver-gray leaf buds primed to open. This elegant lightweight scarf features a detail adapted from this stunning window. Silk crepe de chine. 72”L x 18”W.
Produced by The Metropolitan Museum of Art in cooperation with The Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art, Winter Park, Florida.
$399.95 $464.00
The Arts and Crafts Pine Landscape Tile Mantel Clock case is made by hand in Iowa by Schlabaugh & Sons in natural quarter sawn oak with a dark craftsman oak stain finish. The clock face is printed parchment behind glass. This Craftsman style clock is complimented with an inset 4" x 8" Pine Landscape Motawi tile. The design of the...
$83.95 $125.00
Frank Lloyd Wright used Teco pottery as decorative accents in many of the houses he designed. Teco (an abbreviation of TErra COtta) art pottery was originally produced from 1899-1920’s by the American Terra Cotta and Ceramics Company in Terra Cotta, Illinois. With groundbreaking shapes both architectural and organic, these high-quality reproductions maintain the integrity of the originals. Water tight with...
$87.50 $124.00
This Frank Lloyd Wright Waterlilies Stained Glass, depicting flowers and lily pads floating in a tranquil pool, is adapted from an unrealized leaded stained glass window designed by Wright circa 1893-95. On this glass panel, enamel colors are individually applied to a single sheet of glass which is then kiln fired to permanently fuse the enamels to the glass. The...
$108.75 $130.00
The Frank Lloyd Wright Oak Park Skylight Wood Framed Stained Glass design is adapted from one of the matched pair of art glass skylights in the entrance to Frank Lloyd Wright's studio, attached to his home in Oak Park, IL. On this glass panel, enamel colors are individually applied to a single sheet of glass which is then kiln fired...