Description: Stained Glass Window 19th Century John LaFarge John La Farge Very Rare Stained Glass Window Year: c. 1880Description: A most magnificent stained and jeweled glass window, attributed to John La Farge, a contemporary and competitor of Louis Comfort Tiffany. The window depicts central blossoms emerging from the center in rose and pink, against striated glass. The tall blossoms reaching for the blue sky above are flanked two architectural columns. This wonderful window was rescued from a mansion in Cincinnati, Ohio. It was once used asa landing window in a beautiful stairway. This window are perfect for a large stairway and/ landing. Plan your stairway around this very significant 19th century window.THE WINDOW IS DISASSEMBLED AND COMES IN ITS OWN CRATE. ASSEMBLY IS EASY AS IT IS ALL RECTANGULAR PANELS. A FRAME WILL HAVE TO BE CONSTRUCTED ON SITE. OAK DECORATIVE FRAME WOULD BE FITTING. John La Farge (1835-1910) was an American painter, stained glass window maker, decorator, and writer. Height: 120 in. (304.80 cm) Width: 75 in. (190.50 cm) Depth: Country of Origin: USA Style: American Maker: John LaFarge Condition: Excellent JOHN LAFARGE HISTORY Born in New York City to wealthy French émigré Roman Catholic parents, La Farge grew up in a cultured French-speaking household. He received a Catholic education at St. John's College (later Fordham) in New York and at Mt. Saint Mary's College in Maryland, where he graduated in 1853. Uncertain about a career in law that he began to pursue, he went to Paris in 1856 and briefly studied painting with Thomas Couture. Returning to New York, he took a space in the new Tenth Street Studio Building. In 1859 he went to work with painter William Morris Hunt in Newport, Rhode Island, but soon left the studio to paint directly from nature, inspired by Newport's beautiful environment and his own advanced approach to aesthetics. It was in Newport during the 1860s and early 1870s that some critics suggest that La Farge produced the first impressionist experiments painted on American soil and also some of the most beautiful flower paintings ever created. In the late 1850s and early 1860s, La Farge became a pioneer in collecting Japanese art and incorporating Japanese effects into his work. He may have purchased his first Japanese prints in Paris in 1856, and this interest was probably encouraged by his marriage in 1860 to Margaret Perry (with whom he had ten children), niece of the Commodore who had opened Japan to the West. By the early 1860s, La Farge was not only collecting Japanese prints, but was also making use of Japanese compositional ideas in his paintings to create effects which looked strange, empty, and unbalanced by Western standards. In 1869, La Farge published an essay on Japanese art, the first ever written by a Western artist, in which he particularly noted the asymmetrical compositions, high horizons, and clear, heightened color of Japanese prints. La Farge began his career as a painter of landscapes and figure compositions. Hewas commissioned in 1876 to decorate H. H. Richardson's Trinity Church, Boston. This was the first real mural painting in America and marks an epoch in art: he is considered the father of the American mural movement. Thereafter, he engaged primarily in mural painting and designing stained glass. LaFarge achieved international fame for his stained glass at the 1889 Exposition Universale in Paris where he won first prize with his entry The Sealing of the Twelve Tribes. The French government offered to buy the window after the Exposition, but the window was a commission by a Buffalonian and the window was (and still is) installed in Buffalo. In 1901 he was awarded a gold medal at the Pan- American Exposition at Buffalo. A lifelong Roman Catholic, he did much of his best work for churches. His splendid windows may be seen in the churches of Buffalo, N.Y., and Worcester, Mass., and in the chapels of Harvard and Columbia universities. La Farge worked in many media. His watercolors and drawings are well known, particularly those commemorating his visit to the South Seas in 1886. His easel paintings are in many leading American museums. His writings and lectures on art are distinguished for their urbanity and judgment. LaFarge's contributions to stained glass technique include the following: 1.) The development and use of opalescent glass - now generally known as American stained glass - which he first patented in 1880 2.) Incorporating molded glass embellishments into his creations, usually in the shapes of jewels or flowers 3.) Plating, the layering of glass pieces directly on top of each other to achieve detailed depth and minimize the need for painting 4.) Use of thin copper wire or foil to replace heavy lead lines, techniques that made possible the work of Louis Comfort Tiffany
Price: 14995 USD
Location: Los Angeles, California
End Time: 2023-09-15T20:12:14.000Z
Shipping Cost: N/A USD
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 14 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Type: LANDING WINDOW
Shape: RECTANGULAR
Size: Large
Decade: 1880's
Original/Reproduction: Antique Original
Age: 1880
Maker: John LaFarge