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The Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art is home to the world's most comprehensive collection of works by Louis Comfort Tiffany.
morsemuseum.org

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Photography flashed on the scene in the late 1800s, embraced by some artists and rejected by others. Louis Comfort Tiffany was of the former camp—recognizing how the new medium could record impressions for finished artworks. https://t.co/1o98Qnx1mH

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Visitors to Louis Comfort Tiffany's Laurelton Hall estate entered through a grand reception hall. Learn more on one of our gallery tours at 2:30 p.m. most Tuesdays and Thursdays! https://t.co/2ZhWLpr7nt

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In Scandinavian artist Anders Monsen Askevold's 1895 oil-on-canvas view of a fjord, the chilly Norwegian clime is a picture of tranquility. This work is on view in our painting gallery!

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Alice Carmen Gouvy's strikingly realistic c. 1901 watercolor study of cedar berries for Tiffany Studios brings to mind the woodsy, almost peppery scent of a beloved holiday evergreen. Nature studies were used as design references for Tiffany products.

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Merry Christmas! The Morse wishes you and your family of little angels a joyous day! From the Morse collection: "Here's a Jolly Christmas Load," woodblock print, 1886, Frederick Stuart Church, American, 1842–1924.

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Cincinnati potter Thomas J. Wheatley (1853–1917) was inspired by French barbotine pottery, often decorated with 3-D forms. See this stunning c. 1880–82 vase by Wheatley in our major new exhibition, "Earth into Art—The Flowering of American Art Pottery." https://t.co/929TyYeBZg

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Christmas in the Park is one week from today! The choir has been teaming up with our Tiffany windows for the free event since 1986. This 1990 photo was taken when the celebration, much smaller in scale, was set in south Central Park. https://t.co/UDFnsBrA1l

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Alice Carmen Gouvy's strikingly realistic c. 1901 watercolor study of cedar berries for Tiffany Studios brings to mind the woodsy, almost peppery scent of a beloved holiday evergreen. Nature studies were used as design references for Tiffany products.

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Visitors to Louis Comfort Tiffany's Laurelton Hall estate entered through a grand reception hall. Learn more on our evening gallery tour this Friday at 7 p.m.! Admission is FREE from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m. https://t.co/wy5tFZMH7j

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Molded glass gives the purple-and-blue grape clusters in this Tiffany window, c. 1902–15, a three-dimensional appearance. The window, 29 inches high by 38 1/2 inches wide, is one of a pair on view. https://t.co/RWWEEXPLbh

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