Skip to main content
“Flower-Form” Vase - Image 1
“Flower-Form” Vase - Image 2
“Flower-Form” Vase - Image 3
“Flower-Form” Vase - Image 4
Public Domain

Louis Comfort Tiffany and Tiffany Studios

“Flower-Form” Vase

1900-1910

Thumbnail 1
Thumbnail 2
Thumbnail 3
Thumbnail 4
Scroll

“Flower-Form” Vase

1900-1910

Physical Qualities Glass, Overall: 16 × 5 1/4 × 5 1/4 in. (40.6 × 13.3 × 13.3 cm.)
Credit Line Gift of Rosalee Davison and Charlotte C. Weinberg, Baltimore, in Memory of their Parents, Ben and Zelda Cohen
Object Number 2003.144
Louis Comfort Tiffany derived the name of his patented Favrile glass from “fabrile,” an Old English or Old French word meaning “handcrafted.” Workmen at his Long Island furnaces in Corona mixed different colors of melted glass together before blowing the molten “gather” (hot glass on the tip of a blowpipe) into various forms. Tiffany described his Favrile glass as “usually iridescent like the wings of certain American butterflies, the necks of pigeons and peacocks, the wing covers of various beetles.” Flowers were of special importance to Tiffany, whether cultivated in his lush gardens or imagined in shimmering glass
The Baltimore Museum of Art by gift 2003; Rosalee Davison Designs, Baltimore, MD

Inscribed: Etched signature, on foot, around edge: "S.(?) C.S. L.C. Tiffany favrile 2242A"

Designer

Louis Comfort Tiffany

1847–1932

1848 - 1933
Meet Louis Comfort Tiffany

Manufacturer

Tiffany Studios

1901–1931

New York, 1902-1932
Meet Tiffany Studios

Explore the Collection Further

Louis Comfort Tiffany and Tiffany Studios
"Flower-Form" Vase
1907
Clara Peeters
A Still Life of Lilies, Roses, Iris, Pansies, Columbine, Love-in-a-Mist, Larkspur and Other Flowers in a Glass Vase on a Table Top, Flanked by a Rose and a Carnation
1604–1614
Matsumi Kanemitsu
Flowers In A Vase
1941–1956
James McNeill Whistler
Oviform Vase and Cylindrical Vase
1877