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Poppy Filigree Table Lamp | musefully
Clara Wolcott Driscoll. Poppy Filigree Table Lamp, c.1902–10. Leaded glass, blown glass, brass, bronze, height: 58.5 x 42 cm (23 1/16 x 16 9/16 in.); Shade diameter: 42 cm (16 9/16 in.). Bequest of Charles Maurer, 2018.275. CC0.
Poppy Filigree Table Lamp
c.1902–10
Clara Wolcott Driscoll
Clara Wolcott Driscoll (American, 1861–1944)
Decorative Art and Design
Poppy Filigree Table Lamp, c.1902–10. Probably by Clara Wolcott Driscoll (American, 1861–1944), Tiffany Studios (American, New York, 1902–1932). Leaded glass, blown glass, brass, bronze; height: 58.5 x 42 cm (23 1/16 x 16 9/16 in.); shade diameter: 42 cm (16 9/16 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Bequest of Charles Maurer 2018.275 In the 1870s a renewed emphasis on natural landscapes ushered in a generation of cottage gardeners who delighted in planting perennials in large quantities. Louis Comfort Tiffany was among those who championed the lush, sometimes wild-looking displays of varied floral species in the garden at his Long Island estate, Laurelton Hall. Tiffany encouraged his designers to take inspiration from his garden by shipping fresh cuttings almost weekly to his studios. Ohio native Clara Wolcott Driscoll and her team of female designers created floral patterns for lamps and mosaics based on the colorful blooms of spring that became among the most sought after and commercially successful of Tiffany’s production. Brass filigree layered over and underneath the glass in the Poppy lamp helps define its blossoms and leaves.