TIFFANY STUDIOS
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TIFFANY STUDIOS

A FAVRILE GLASS AND WROUGHT-IRON FIRE SCREEN, CIRCA 1905

Details
TIFFANY STUDIOS
A Favrile Glass and Wrought-Iron Fire Screen, circa 1905
with gilt details
31¾ in. (80.6 cm.) high, 57¾ in. (146.7 cm.) wide, 9 in. (22.8 cm.) deep
Provenance
With Frederick S. Bailey, Inc., Rochester, NY.
Literature
M. A. Johnson, Louis Comfort Tiffany: artist for the ages, London, 2005, p. 169, cat. no. 72.
Exhibited
Seattle, Seattle Art Museum; Toledo, Toledo Museum of Art; Dallas, Dallas Museum of Art; Pittsburgh, Carnegie Museum of Art, Louis Comfort Tiffany: artist for the ages, October 2005-January 2007.
Special notice
No sales tax is due on the purchase price of this lot if it is picked up or delivered in the State of New York.

Lot Essay

According to Marilynn A. Johnson, in her book Louis Comfort Tiffany Artist for the Ages, this extraordinary wrought iron and glass "chain mail" fire screen was originally placed in Cro Nest, the Rochester, New York, home of Claude Fayette Bragdon (1866-1946). Trained as an architect, Bragdon designed numerous buildings of note in the Rochester area. Of multifarious interests, however, Bragdon was also known for his stage designs, profound interest in mysticism and the occult, and his lectures and extensive writings on architecture, design, theater, yoga and theosophy. He was also a disciple of Louis Sullivan and wrote the forward to Sullivan's seminal treatise Kindergarten Chats.

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