Loggia from Laurelton Hall, Oyster Bay, New York by Louis C. Tiffany This columnar screen once served as the terrace entrance to Laurelton Hall, the extraordinary Oyster Bay, New York home that Tiffany designed for himself between 1902 and 1905. The exotic capitals featured flowers (lotus, perony, poppy and magnolia) in various stages of bloom. The blooms are composed of glazed ceramic and the stems of tiny slivers of varicolored green glass. Iridescrent Glass tiles cover the architrave, and geometric moseics enbellish the supporting corbbeled arches, from which three bell-shaped lanterns are supended. Laurelton Hall was the crowning achievement of Tiffany's multifaceted career. After he established the Louis C. Tiffany Foundation in 1918, the estate became the site of a residential summer program for artists. In 1957, it was tragically destroyed by fire. Some architectural elements were salagaed from the ruins, in including this loggia.
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