Press Release - Chrysler Museum of Art

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Cindy Mackey, cmackey@chrysler.org, 757-754-4553
TIFFANY’S LOVE OF NATURE INSPIRES EXHIBITION
FROM THE CHRYSLER MUSEUM OF ART’S COLLECTION
NORFOLK, Va. – (August 2012) – The Chrysler Museum of Art presents The Natural Beauty
of Tiffany: Selections from the Chrysler Museum August 18 to December 30, 2012.
Admission is free.
Louis Comfort Tiffany (1848–1933), one of America’s best known businessmen and most
talented artists, directed an artistic empire in the design and creation of stunning leaded glass
windows and lamps, blown glass vessels, mosaics, and other objects of luxury. Tiffany found
great beauty in the natural world—the primary inspiration for his paintings and decorative work
in metal, pottery, and glass. This exhibition presents many of the Museum’s finest examples of
his work inspired by flora and fauna.
"Louis Comfort Tiffany was deeply moved by the complex beauty found in nature,” said Kelly
Conway, the Carolyn and Richard Barry curator of glass. “He created an idyllic landscape at
his home on Long Island, with many exotic species of plants and flowers. This exhibition
features some of Tiffany Studios' unique interpretations of flowers, vegetation, marine life and
other natural elements, executed in glass, ceramics, and bronze."
Highlights of the exhibition include a garden of blown glass flowers, unique examples of
ceramics and enamels, and some of the rarest and most expensive lamps known—the
glorious blue Dragonfly and Pond Lily library lamps. The works of art are all from the Chrysler
Museum’s world-famous Tiffany collection, which is nearly comprehensive in the area of blown
glass and also includes mosaics, windows and lamps.
"We are diligently packing up our entire glass collection in preparation for an exciting new
renovation of the galleries,” added Conway. “However, it was very important to us to keep a
selection of our greatest Tiffany treasures on view for visitors. It is always good to see our
favorite objects in a new light, and this exhibition gives us an opportunity to appreciate the
artistic inspiration found in nature."
The Chrysler Museum of Art holds one of the largest and most comprehensive collections of
glass in the world, with more than 10,000 glass objects spanning 3,000 years. The foundations
of the collection were established by the early 1950s with a significant bequest of New England
Glass Company glasses from the estate of Norfolk resident Florence Smith. In 1971, Walter P.
Chrysler, Jr. donated more than 8,000 works of glass to the Museum, establishing the
collection as a place of pilgrimage for glass scholars and enthusiasts. Major gifts of English
cameo, 20th-century Italian, and contemporary glass continue to diversify and strengthen the
collection well into the 21st century.
The Museum is located at 245 West Olney Road in Norfolk, and the Chrysler Museum Glass
Studio is located across the street. Both are open Wednesdays, 10 a.m.-9 p.m.; ThursdaysSaturdays, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., and Sundays, noon-5 p.m. The Chrysler and the Glass Studio are
closed on Mondays and Tuesdays, as well as major holidays. Admission to the Museum’s
collection and Studio’s glassblowing demonstrations are free. For exhibitions, programming
and special events, visit chrysler.org or call 757-664-6200.
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