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Vase

Tiffany & Co.

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 199


This vase can be described as a happy accident. A note accompanying a sketch of it in the Tiffany technical manual reads, "Remember copper vases made for Paris order—The solder was full of holes and these were filled with plugs of brass (incrusted) & silver (fine) which, when finished instead of being repulsive, on the contrary rendered the effect more beautiful than had been sought for." Here, Moore’s team devised a brilliant solution to flaws in the solder and made these spots, which they poetically dubbed "snail’s eggs," integral features of the composition. The lustrous purplish-gray surface makes the vase all the more striking, exemplifying Tiffany’s mastery of techniques to endow copper with the rich, shimmering tones of the glass and ceramics in Moore’s collection.

Vase, Tiffany & Co. (1837–present), Silver, copper, brass, and silver-copper-zinc alloy, American

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