Welcome: Stained Glass Window from the Mrs. George T. Bliss House, New York

John La Farge American

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 700

John La Farge was Louis Comfort Tiffany’s closest rival in the use of opalescent, colored, and textured glass. This window, completed the year before La Farge’s death, was one of his most complex works. Commissioned in 1908 by Mrs. George T. Bliss for her house at 9 East Sixty-Eighth Street in New York City, it features a young woman in classical garb welcoming visitors while drawing back a portiere—a replication in glass of a Chinese embroidered textile originally owned by the Bliss family. The cloisonné technique of joining together many tiny pieces of glass was used to evoke folds in the figure’s gown. Decorative panels with garlands and Pompeian ornament frame the window. The work took over a year to complete, but La Farge considered it “the finest piece of glass ever made. . . . I am proud of it beyond what I can explain.”

#3815. Welcome: Stained Glass Window from the Mrs. George T. Bliss House, New York

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Welcome: Stained Glass Window from the Mrs. George T. Bliss House, New York, John La Farge (American, New York 1835–1910 Providence, Rhode Island), Leaded opalescent glass, cloisonne glass, copper wire, paint, American

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