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Louis Tiffany

Louis Tiffany. Three Dimensional Stained Glass Sculpture. Louis Comfort Tiffany. American artist born in 1848 and died in 1933. Louis Comfort Tiffany. American artist born in 1848 and died in 1933 Worked in the decorative arts and stained glass. Louis Comfort Tiffany.

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Louis Tiffany

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  1. Louis Tiffany Three Dimensional Stained Glass Sculpture

  2. Louis ComfortTiffany • American artist born in 1848 and died in 1933

  3. Louis ComfortTiffany • American artist born in 1848 and died in 1933 • Worked in the decorative arts and stained glass

  4. Louis ComfortTiffany • American artist born in 1848 and died in 1933 • Worked in the decorative arts and stained glass • Was considered part of the Art Nouveau and Aesthetic Art Aesthetic Movements

  5. Louis ComfortTiffany • American artist born in 1848 and died in 1933 • Worked in the decorative arts and stained glass • Was considered part of the Art Nouveau and Aesthetic Art Aesthetic Movements • Son of Charles Lewis Tiffany, the jeweler who founded Tiffany & Co.

  6. Louis ComfortTiffany • American artist born in 1848 and died in 1933 • Worked in the decorative arts and stained glass • Was considered part of the Art Nouveau and Aesthetic Art Aesthetic Movements • Son of Charles Lewis Tiffany, the jeweler who founded Tiffany & Co. • In the beginning of his career he used inexpensive colored jelly jars and bottles to create his glass

  7. Louis ComfortTiffany • American artist born in 1848 and died in 1933 • Worked in the decorative arts and stained glass • Was considered part of the Art Nouveau and Aesthetic Art Aesthetic Movements • Son of Charles Lewis Tiffany, the jeweler who founded Tiffany & Co. • In the beginning of his career he used inexpensive colored jelly jars and bottles to create his glass • Later he “upgraded” by creating his own colored glass by using opalescent glass in a variety of colors which created a more refined look

  8. Louis ComfortTiffany • American artist born in 1848 and died in 1933 • Worked in the decorative arts and stained glass • Was considered part of the Art Nouveau and Aesthetic Art Aesthetic Movements • Son of Charles Lewis Tiffany, the jeweler who founded Tiffany & Co. • In the beginning of his career he used inexpensive colored jelly jars and bottles to create his glass • Later he “upgraded” by creating his own colored glass by using opalescent glass in a variety of colors which created a more refined look • Tiffany’s first produced their famous lamps in 1895

  9. Louis ComfortTiffany • American artist born in 1848 and died in 1933 • Worked in the decorative arts and stained glass • Was considered part of the Art Nouveau and Aesthetic Art Aesthetic Movements • Son of Charles Lewis Tiffany, the jeweler who founded Tiffany & Co. • In the beginning of his career he used inexpensive colored jelly jars and bottles to create his glass • Later he “upgraded” by creating his own colored glass by using opalescent glass in a variety of colors which created a more refined look • Tiffany’s first produced their famous lamps in 1895 • Tiffany had many women designers who influenced him to create floral and mosaic designs in the lamps and his other designs

  10. Louis TiffanyTiffany Studios Daffodil What do you see?

  11. Louis TiffanyTiffany Studios Daffodil • What do you see? • A lamp! The Tiffany studios created decorative items for the interior of your home including many of these famous lamps

  12. Louis TiffanyTiffany Studios Daffodil • What do you see? • A lamp! The Tiffany studios created decorative items for the interior of your home including many of these famous lamps • Interior Design – design for the inside of building or homes

  13. Louis TiffanyTiffany Studios Daffodil • What do you see? • A lamp! The Tiffany studios created decorative items for the interior of your home including many of these famous lamps • Interior Design – design for the inside of building or homes • Decorative arts – those that are functional yet handmade such as furniture, lamps, accessories, and jewelry

  14. Louis TiffanyTiffany Studios Daffodil • What do you see? • A lamp! The Tiffany studios created decorative items for the interior of your home including many of these famous lamps • Interior Design – design for the inside of building or homes • Decorative arts – those that are functional yet handmade such as furniture, lamps, accessories, and jewelry • Flowers! These were present in a lot of the designs in the Art Nouveau movement

  15. Louis TiffanyTiffany Studios Daffodil • What do you see? • A lamp! The Tiffany studios created decorative items for the interior of your home including many of these famous lamps • Interior Design – design for the inside of building or homes • Decorative arts – those that are functional yet handmade such as furniture, lamps, accessories, and jewelry • Flowers! These were present in a lot of the designs in the Art Nouveau movement • Art Nouveau – a style of decoration of the late 19th and 20th centuries, characterized by the depiction of leaves and flowers in flowing, sinuous (curving) lines

  16. Louis TiffanyTiffany Studios Venetian circa 1910-1920 • Would this lamp be considered a 2-D or 3-D form?

  17. Louis TiffanyTiffany Studios Venetian circa 1910-1920 • Would this lamp be considered a 2-D or 3-D form? • 3-D! Although, this started as a 2-D figure and got wrapped around to create this 3-D lamp shade

  18. Louis TiffanyTiffany Studios Venetian circa 1910-1920 • Would this lamp be considered a 2-D or 3-D form? • 3-D! Although, this started as a 2-D figure and got wrapped around to create this 3-D lamp shade • What else do you notice in this piece?

  19. Louis TiffanyTiffany Studios Venetian circa 1910-1920 • Would this lamp be considered a 2-D or 3-D form? • 3-D! Although, this started as a 2-D figure and got wrapped around to create this 3-D lamp shade • What else do you notice in this piece? • More flowers, leaves, organic shapes

  20. Louis TiffanyTiffany Studios Venetian circa 1910-1920 • Would this lamp be considered a 2-D or 3-D form? • 3-D! Although, this started as a 2-D figure and got wrapped around to create this 3-D lamp shade • What else do you notice in this piece? • More flowers, leaves, organic shapes • Repetition – repeating a shape and/or color in a pattern throughout your design

  21. Louis TiffanyStained glass Now we are going to create our own 2-D design that when finished we will form it into a 3-D form!

  22. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Now we are going to create our own 2-D design that when finished we will form it into a 3-D form! • With help from our parent volunteers, carefully remove the backing from the contact paper and place your wire “loop” on it sticky side up

  23. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Now we are going to create our own 2-D design that when finished we will form it into a 3-D form! • With help from our parent volunteers, carefully remove the backing from the contact paper and place your wire “loop” on it sticky side up • Fold up the sides of the contact paper around the “loop”. You may need to trim the corners off a little so that you don’t cover up too much of the sticky side

  24. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Now we are going to create our own 2-D design that when finished we will form it into a 3-D form! • With help from our parent volunteers, carefully remove the backing from the contact paper and place your wire “loop” on it sticky side up • Fold up the sides of the contact paper around the “loop”. You may need to trim the corners off a little so that you don’t cover up too much of the sticky side • Set the “loop” to the side and begin cutting out repetitive shapes from the tissue paper – fold up the tissue paper so that you can get multiple shapes with only one cut

  25. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Now we are going to create our own 2-D design that when finished we will form it into a 3-D form! • With help from our parent volunteers, carefully remove the backing from the contact paper and place your wire “loop” on it sticky side up • Fold up the sides of the contact paper around the “loop”. You may need to trim the corners off a little so that you don’t cover up too much of the sticky side • Set the “loop” to the side and begin cutting out repetitive shapes from the tissue paper – fold up the tissue paper so that you can get multiple shapes with only one cut • Think about shapes – what shapes will you cut out? Flowers, footballs, pumpkins, cars, etc.

  26. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Think about colors – will you use warm (red, orange, yellow) or cool colors (green, blue, purple), or a mix of both to create contrast?

  27. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Think about colors – will you use warm (red, orange, yellow) or cool colors (green, blue, purple), or a mix of both to create contrast? • Once you have cut out your repetitive shapes, place your “loop” sticky side up on your desk and start placing your shapes on the contact paper

  28. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Think about colors – will you use warm (red, orange, yellow) or cool colors (green, blue, purple), or a mix of both to create contrast? • Once you have cut out your repetitive shapes, place your “loop” sticky side up on your desk and start placing your shapes on the contact paper • Think about design, using the whole surface, and being thoughtful about your placement of objects – maybe using a pattern like the Tiffany lamps we saw today?

  29. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Think about colors – will you use warm (red, orange, yellow) or cool colors (green, blue, purple), or a mix of both to create contrast? • Once you have cut out your repetitive shapes, place your “loop” sticky side up on your desk and start placing your shapes on the contact paper • Think about design, using the whole surface, and being thoughtful about your placement of objects – maybe using a pattern like the Tiffany lamps we saw today? • Once your designs are placed on the contact paper, turn it to the non-sticky side and use a permanent marker to draw in any details or extra designs to make your piece more interesting

  30. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Think about colors – will you use warm (red, orange, yellow) or cool colors (green, blue, purple), or a mix of both to create contrast? • Once you have cut out your repetitive shapes, place your “loop” sticky side up on your desk and start placing your shapes on the contact paper • Think about design, using the whole surface, and being thoughtful about your placement of objects – maybe using a pattern like the Tiffany lamps we saw today? • Once your designs are placed on the contact paper, turn it to the non-sticky side and use a permanent marker to draw in any details or extra designs to make your piece more interesting • Place your name on that side as well

  31. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Think about colors – will you use warm (red, orange, yellow) or cool colors (green, blue, purple), or a mix of both to create contrast? • Once you have cut out your repetitive shapes, place your “loop” sticky side up on your desk and start placing your shapes on the contact paper • Think about design, using the whole surface, and being thoughtful about your placement of objects – maybe using a pattern like the Tiffany lamps we saw today? • Once your designs are placed on the contact paper, turn it to the non-sticky side and use a permanent marker to draw in any details or extra designs to make your piece more interesting • Place your name on that side as well • Lastly, pick up your “loop” and bend it into a 3-D form!

  32. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Let’s review – today we learned how to create a 2-D shape and form it into a 3-D form using the concept of stained glass for our design.

  33. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Let’s review – today we learned how to create a 2-D shape and form it into a 3-D form using the concept of stained glass for our design. • Form – The stained glass started as 2-D, but then got wrapped around a designed lamp to make a 3-D form

  34. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Let’s review – today we learned how to create a 2-D shape and form it into a 3-D form using the concept of stained glass for our design. • Form – The stained glass started as 2-D, but then got wrapped around a designed lamp to make a 3-D form • Decorative arts – those that are functional yet handmade such as furniture, lamps, accessories, and jewelry

  35. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Let’s review – today we learned how to create a 2-D shape and form it into a 3-D form using the concept of stained glass for our design. • Form – The stained glass started as 2-D, but then got wrapped around a designed lamp to make a 3-D form • Decorative arts – those that are functional yet handmade such as furniture, lamps, accessories, and jewelry • Interior design – design for the inside of spaces

  36. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Let’s review – today we learned how to create a 2-D shape and form it into a 3-D form using the concept of stained glass for our design. • Form – The stained glass started as 2-D, but then got wrapped around a designed lamp to make a 3-D form • Decorative arts – those that are functional yet handmade such as furniture, lamps, accessories, and jewelry • Interior design – design for the inside of spaces • Art Nouveau – a style of decoration and architecture in the late 19th and 20th centuries, characterized particularly by the depiction of leaves and flowers in flowing, sinuous (curved) lines

  37. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Let’s review – today we learned how to create a 2-D shape and form it into a 3-D form using the concept of stained glass for our design. • Form – The stained glass started as 2-D, but then got wrapped around a designed lamp to make a 3-D form • Decorative arts – those that are functional yet handmade such as furniture, lamps, accessories, and jewelry • Interior design – design for the inside of spaces • Art Nouveau – a style of decoration and architecture in the late 19th and 20th centuries, characterized particularly by the depiction of leaves and flowers in flowing, sinuous (curved) lines • Repetition – repeating a shape and/or color in a pattern throughout your design

  38. Louis TiffanyStained glass • Discussion Questions: • What was our artists name for today? • What art movement was he involved in? • Is our final creation from today 2-D or 3-D? • With taking time to design and create a one of a kind form, do you think these decorative artworks should be more expensive or less expensive than another form that is mass produced and your could buy at a regular store like Target? Like a chair or bedroom set or a couch? • Do you like decorative art works? Why or why not? See if your can explain your answer using art words you know…

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