Queen Anne's Lace Hair Ornament

Designed by Louis C. Tiffany American
Louis C. Tiffany American

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 743

Tiffany exhibited three Queen Anne's lace ornaments representing various stages of bloom at the Saint Louis Exposition in 1904. This hair ornament-composed of delicate silver wires bearing tiny opals, demantoid garnets, garnets, and enamel florets-shows the flower in full bloom. Leaves of silver covered in translucent green enamel and copper painted green, visible on the under-side of the piece, increase the impression of naturalism. Whereas jewelry typically made at his father's firm, Tiffany and Company, tended to replicate more formal flowers, such as orchids and irises, and utilized primarily precious stones, Tiffany's use of a common wildflower and semi-precious stones aligns this work with avant-garde Parisian jewelers of the Art Nouveau.

Queen Anne's Lace Hair Ornament, Designed by Louis C. Tiffany (American, New York 1848–1933 New York), Silver, copper, opals, demantoid garnets, garnets, and enamel, American

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