By Maggie Humberston
Tiffany Lamps: Articles of Utility, Objects of Art. You
enter a cool, low-lit gallery full of botanical shapes, unexpected textures and
glorious colors – all executed in glass. One thing I like is that right away you’re
oriented to the craft involved; two cases at the beginning of the show feature
samples of the glass used in the pieces and the process of joining those pieces
together into an artistic leaded glass whole. This gives the visitor an
immediate appreciation of what’s involved in the creation of these decorative
art lamps. As you walk through the show, the colors from the lampshades glow from
their electric light, allowing you to see every intricate detail in their
make-up. The show features a number of pieces of leaded glass, but also has blown
glass, and my favorite, “favrile fabrique,” which renders glass into pleated
folds that looks like cloth. Supplemental photos in large format depict the Tiffany
Company workshops and sales rooms in New
York , newspaper advertisements, and some of the botanical
inspirations for the work. The show runs through Sept. 9th.
Accompanying the show is the MFA’s exhibit of its own
contemporary glass. It features works of older masters like Rene Lalique and
Louis Comfort Tiffany himself, along with contemporary glass artists like Josh
Simpson and Dale Chihuly.
On to the George
Walter Vincent
Smith Museum ,
built in 1895 and appropriately late Victorian in décor, to see the newly
restored Tiffany windows which were commissioned by the Smiths themselves. Upstairs
don’t miss Tiffany’s “The Light Bearer”,
given by the Bowles family, owners of the Springfield Republican, to the
Church of the Unity, one of Henry Hobson Richardson’s churches, once holding
court across State Street in Springfield. Sadly, it was demolished in the 1960s
– to put up a parking lot.
Finally – and I did say it was a trail, right – you should
go over to the new Wood Museum of Springfield History to see the Tiffany
engraved guns on the second floor. There are lots of great photos of Springfield
in the early 20th century on the walls to take you back to the
heyday of Tiffany himself, and while you’re there you can see the kinds of
industrial innovations and neat luxury cars that were the capstone of his era.
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