Tiffany Studios New York "Lotus Leaf" Table Lamp
This Tiffany Studios New York "Lotus Leaf" table lamp, considered among the most architecturally complex of the firm's designs, features an ombre leaded glass shade that graduates subtly in hue from the most vibrant green to an almost milky white, and sits on a patinated bronze base specifically designed to accompany it. The lamp is notable for its Eastern influence, as the shape of the shade designed to mimic that of a Japanese parasol as well as a lotus leaf, and for its early hybridization of the two tranches of Tiffany Studios New York designs; the geometric and the floral.
Item #: L-20992
Artist: Tiffany Studios New York
Country: United States
Circa: 1900
Dimensions: 26.5" diameter x 31.5" height
Materials: Leaded glass, Bronze
Shade Signed: “Tiffany Studios New York 1524-4”
Base Signed: “Tiffany Studios New York 374”
Exhibition History: Duplicates of this style of lamp are featured in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art (acquired 2011), MOMA (acquired 1976), Cornell University (acquired 1987), and the Minneapolis Institute of Art (acquired 1998), and SLAM, St. Louis Museum of Art.
Literature: Similar lamp pictured in The "Lost" Treasures of Louis Comfort Tiffany, by Hugh F. McKean, figure 197, p. 200
Item #: L-20992
Artist: Tiffany Studios New York
Country: United States
Circa: 1900
Dimensions: 26.5" diameter x 31.5" height
Materials: Leaded glass, Bronze
Shade Signed: “Tiffany Studios New York 1524-4”
Base Signed: “Tiffany Studios New York 374”
Exhibition History: Duplicates of this style of lamp are featured in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art (acquired 2011), MOMA (acquired 1976), Cornell University (acquired 1987), and the Minneapolis Institute of Art (acquired 1998), and SLAM, St. Louis Museum of Art.
Literature: Similar lamp pictured in The "Lost" Treasures of Louis Comfort Tiffany, by Hugh F. McKean, figure 197, p. 200