The Cycad Collection: Masterworks by Tiffany Studios and Prewar Design

The Cycad Collection: Masterworks by Tiffany Studios and Prewar Design

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 210. "Peacock Feather" Gooseneck Vase.

Tiffany Studios

"Peacock Feather" Gooseneck Vase

Auction Closed

December 6, 11:14 PM GMT

Estimate

20,000 - 30,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Tiffany Studios

"Peacock Feather" Gooseneck Vase


circa 1897-1899

favrile glass

engraved L.C.T./F2231

18½ in. (47 cm) high

Heritage Auctions, New York, November 16-17, 2012, lot 62022

Andrew Shine Collection

Sotheby's New York, December 12, 2018, lot 333

Acquired from the above by the present owner

Robert Koch, Louis C. Tiffany: The Collected Works of Robert Koch, Atglen, PA, 2001, p. 194 (for a related example)

John Loring, Louis Comfort Tiffany at Tiffany & Co., New York, 2002, p. 141 (for a related example)

Martin Eidelberg, Tiffany Favrile Glass and the Quest of Beauty, New York, 2007, p. 49 (for a related example)

Paul E. Doros, The Art Glass of Louis Comfort Tiffany, New York, 2013, p. 193 (for a related example)

Timeless Beauty, The Art of Louis Comfort Tiffany, The Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art, Atglen, PA, 2016, p. 63 (for a related example)

Louis C. Tiffany traveled extensively and made numerous visits to the Middle East.  These trips influenced his aesthetics in myriad ways, including some of the shapes utilized by his glasshouse.  This is particularly evident in the Favrile vases that today are referred to as “Goosenecks.”

Silver rosewater sprinklers in this form first appeared in India during the 16th century.  The model was replicated in both silver and glass extensively throughout Persia 300 years later and it is extremely likely that Tiffany was familiar with these later examples through his travels.   But while the Persians generally made their vases in basic transparent colored glass, those made by Tiffany Studios are either opaque or, if transparent, enhanced with a tooled decoration.

The vase offered here is a superlative example, with its curvaceous neck and pointed oval rim.  The elongated oviform body, executed in green-tinted glass with a delicate opalescent white inner lining, was mold-blown to create a diamond-quilt effect.  It was then decorated with a pulled-feather design and, finally, the entire exterior was enhanced with a brilliant multi-hued iridescence that is particularly striking on the gently ribbed neck.  Deceptively simple in appearance, Tiffany’s blown Favrile version of the rosewater sprinkler required all of the glassblower’s skills and this, together with the fragility of the slender neck, likely accounts for its relative rarity. 

—Paul Doros