Louis Comfort Tiffany (1848-1933) is a designer/manufacturer who needs no introduction. His work is on permanent view in most major museums and there have been many specialized exhibitions, each focusing on one aspect of his vast production. It has been a long time, though, since there was a big show in the United States that conveys the range of his achievements. “Louis Comfort Tiffany: An Artist for the Ages” does just that. This exciting exhibition has both familiar highlights and less well-known works. This means not only stained glass lamps and flower-form vases, but lava glass and wallpaper, too. The exhibition is at the Toledo Museum of Art from February 2 to April 20, and will afterwards travel to the Dallas Museum of Art and the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh. Tiffany was the son of Charles Lewis Tiffany, a prominent New York jeweler. It was young Tiffany’s ambition to be a painter, so he studied with George Inness (1825-1894) and became acquainted with other American artists. Until he was in his late 20s, there was little to distinguish Tiffany from all the other young dilettantes in New York. There were travels in Europe and North Africa, and visits to the Centennial Exhibition to see the Japanese art. Occasionally, he exhibited and sold his paintings, though he remained financially dependent on his father. By the late 1870s, Tiffany was working as an interior designer. He was a persuasive man, judging by the people who hired him at the start of his career. He began near the top, working for various businessmen and industrialists. By the 1880s, his client list included Samuel Clemens and the art collectors Louisine and Henry Osborne Havemeyer. His gift, which is still evident in photographs more than a century later, was to create fantasy interiors for serious people. A Fifth Avenue townhouse, his first major commission, wasinspired by Moorish and Asian styles. The drawing room had many ofthe characteristics associated with Eastern interiors, likeOriental carpets, fretwork and exotic tiles and ceramics, some ofwhich are on display in the exhibition. But there was nothing ofthe sultan’s harem about the room, thanks, in part, to theVictorian details. Hence, the stained glass windows, the piano andthe potted plants that would have also been found in a more soberlydecorated interior. Tiffany also liked to add the occasionalantique; in this case, an old roundabout chair incongruously placednext to a Moorish table. Some of the exotic elements were, moreover, based on forms associated with export wares. Take the armchair, 1879, that was modeled on a Seventeenth Century Indo Portuguese prototype. It is made of holly, a hardwood then popular for high-end furniture, and inlay with Mogul motifs. On the chair back there is a screen of ornamental metalwork inset with pieces of glass. The design was unconventional but familiar, and it was wholly suitable for a drawing room. Many evils have been committed in the name of eclecticism.The precept that beautiful things go together was applied in excessduring the Nineteenth Century, when the rich had a misplaced faithin the compatibility of Mexican saddlecloths, Boulle card tablesand Gothic whatnots. The fashion for Asia, far from being a spur tosimplicity, was often the pretext to add yet another style to thedecorating medley. Tiffany had a light touch, though, and he couldmix and match without making a room look theatrical or antiquarian. The furnishings and decoration from some of his other important commissions are also on display. His work for the Havemeyers is represented by part of the staircase balustrade, 1890-91, for the paintings gallery of their Upper East Side townhouse. The balustrade has gilt bronze scrolls inset with pieces of opalescent glass, and it shimmers even in the old black and white photograph of the room that is reproduced in the catalog. The gallery was sparsely furnished to show off the art more effectively. But it was not a simple room. There were at least a dozen patterns with two or three wallpapers, several Oriental rugs, tiles, upholstery and portieres. The furniture, by contrast, was noticeably understated. At a time when gilt carved furniture was fashionable, the Havemeyers preferred Empire Revival pedestal tables and chairs of the most basic design. Tiffany’s early career as a glass designer coincided with his first decorating commissions. Glass was used for the sparkly mosaics and wildflower chandeliers that were made for the Havemeyers. Stained glass, a Western medium, was used in many of Tiffany’s exotic interiors. Some of his best stained glass designs had an aquatic motif; hence, the two panels on display from the “Four Seasons under the Sea,” 1895-1900, that depict in greens and browns the fish and plant life at the bottom of the sea. The unevenly rippled glass contributes to the murkiness to suggest the visual distortion caused by the currents and uneven light. The designers who worked for Tiffany were encouraged to study from nature. One later recalled that he was sent to the Bahamas to spend his time in a glass bottom boat, looking at marine life. The stained glass lamp with a lily pad motif, 1899-1910, likewise, shows the green leaves of floating lily pads. Here, the depiction is more abstract, with the leaves simple round discs and the stems swirls of a lighter green. The exhibition abounds in peacock tails and dragonflies, twopopular motifs from the 1880s and 1890s. But other works are harderto place, even though they date from the same period. The fishbowlvase, 1893-96, is a case in point. Thematically, it is one of themany works that highlight Tiffany’s indebtedness to Japanese art.But it is impressive as an example of virtuoso illusionism; itreally looks, at first glance, like an ordinary fishbowl, with theswimming goldfish making small ripples in the water. Tiffany was not a craftsman. Unlike William Morris, who learned a new skill every few years, Tiffany was not a perpetual apprentice, who spent his day reading old manuals and personally trying out new techniques. But he was very good at making things happen and he always hired the best people. He was, moreover, a perfectionist, who, according to legend, toured the workshops with his cane raised to destroy any vase or pot he did not like. In Europe, Tiffany glass was exhibited at many of the most important fairs and collected by museums. Although proud of his success overseas, Tiffany continued to emphasize the home market. Thus, he was not especially anxious when European sales of his work declined in the early 1900s. He must have been pained, however, by the waning interest in this country. Many artists fade in popularity, but Tiffany’s reputation collapsed. For many years, beginning in the decade before his death, his work was classed with the clutter and furbelows of the previous century. Even among those who should have known better, Tiffany was irredeemably Victorian. Possibly, this rejection was not only artistic, but also personal. Tiffany’s optimism and ostentation, not to mention his indifference to politics, might have been off-putting in the 1920s and 1930s. “We are going after the money there is in art, but the art is there all the same,” he said at the start of a career, notably deficient in self-torment and adversity. The prejudice against Tiffany was widespread, though it is sometimes, perhaps unfairly, associated with the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). Beginning in the 1950s, a few pieces were on rotating display in the museum’s newly opened design galleries. This recognition was, however, far from a total embrace of his legacy. There was a parsing quality to the museum’s representation of Tiffany. His contribution to Art Nouveau was squarely in bounds because Art Nouveau anticipated the simplification and stylization of the 1920s. The type of piece that fits the museum’s collection guidelines is the simple ocher vase, 1902, that is decorated with white flowers. No “trickery” or illusionism was used for the decoration. But then there was all the other stuff – the mushroom inkstands and mosaic clocks, the pieces that had no place in the museum’s collections because they violated the museum’s rule against realistic or showy ornament. In the genealogy of Modern design, Tiffany was a first cousin once or twice removed. Paradoxically, one of the most influential Tiffany revivalists was a curator at MoMA. Edgar Kaufmann (1910-89), an architecture critic, worked in the design department from the 1930s to the 1950s, where he organized shows on subjects like Danish bookbinding, and wrote layman’s pamphlets on Modern design. (What is Modern Design? is a representative title.) During these years, he built up a significant collection of Tiffany glass. Although he succeeded in donating one piece to the museum, his interest was largely a private matter. In many ways, Kaufmann was no different than any other office worker who pursues in his off hours a hobby of little interest to his colleagues. Childless, he displayed his collection without any of theusual precautions. The precious wares were placed on the floor,lined against the walls of the living room. He was an adventurouscollector with a rare taste for the lava vases, the molten,irregularly shaped pieces that were unappreciated during Tiffany’slifetime. Other revivalists included the furniture designer Edward Wormley (1908-95) and the scholar Robert Koch (1918-2003), who wrote his dissertation on Tiffany’s stained glass. Lillian Nassau (1899-1995), who was for many years the most important Tiffany dealer, dated her passion back to the 1930s, when she saw the beautiful lamps broken up so the metal could be melted down for scrap. Institutionally, the Tiffany revival owed a lot to the provincial and second-tier museums. The Morse Museum, which was founded in the early 1940s for the preservation of Tiffany’s work, was located near Orlando, Fla., which was then something of an agricultural backwater. And one of the first Tiffany retrospectives was conducted in a brownstone across the street from the MoMA, at the newly founded Museum of Contemporary Crafts (today, the Museum of Arts & Design). The big museums seem to have played a less influential role during these years. This was true even of the museums with historic Tiffany collections that were, in part, on permanent view. A white-spotted brown vase, 1893-96, which was probably inspired by the Native American baskets that Tiffany collected, is one of the nearly five dozen pieces the Havemeyers gave to The Metropolitan Museum of Art in the 1890s. Another is the rare glass plaque that suggests the petal-like design of a sand dollar, 1893. The rehabilitation Tiffany’s image was completed so many years ago that it is difficult to imagine how his work could ever have fallen into disgrace – or into what one journalist called the “gutter of derision.” Visitors to this exhibition are in for a treat, thanks to the efforts of those who rescued the reputation of one of America’s great designers. The Toledo Museum of Art is at 2445 Monroe Street at Scottwood Avenue. For information, 419-255-8000 or www.toledomuseum.org.