Dragonflies of Glass
The Story of Clara Driscoll and the Tiffany Girls
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- $169.00
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- $169.00
Descripción editorial
From award-winning kids’ nonfiction author Susan Goldman Rubin, and radiantly illustrated by Susanna Chapman, the picture book Dragonflies of Glass celebrates the innovation, determination, and ambition of the brilliant woman artist behind the world-famous Tiffany glass
In the mid-nineteenth century, most women who weren’t raising families became teachers or nurses. But Clara Driscoll longed to be an artist, drawing inspiration from nature: from every flower, weed, dragonfly, and even cobweb, on her family’s farm.
In 1888, Clara was hired at the renowned Tiffany Glass Company, where Mr. Louis Comfort Tiffany was known for creating gorgeous stained-glass windows for churches, theaters, and libraries. Impressed by her talent at choosing and cutting glass, Mr. Tiffany eventually put Clara in charge of her own staff of 35 women designers.
These “Tiffany Girls” sketched intricate patterns, chose dazzling colors and precise shapes, and carefully soldered and placed each piece of glass to create stunning lamps, murals, windows, vases, and clocks. Yet their names weren’t always credited on the finished pieces, and when Clara designed the “Wisteria” lamp that would become Tiffany Studios’ most famous, everyone assumed that Mr. Tiffany had designed it.
Today, Clara Driscoll‘s work lives on in museums, galleries, and private collections around the world. Dragonflies of Glass celebrates the innovation, determination, and ambition of the unsung women behind many of Tiffany Studios’ masterpieces.
Includes a list of places where Driscoll’s Tiffany art can be found; examples of Driscoll’s Tiffany lamps and archival photographs; endnotes; and a bibliography.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Glass designer Clara Driscoll (1861–1944) dazzles in this illuminating story about her pivotal role in creating some of Tiffany Glass Company's most iconic pieces. Beginning with the protagonist's love of nature in her Ohio childhood, the book leaps swiftly ahead to her move to New York City, where she studies at the Metropolitan Museum Art School, then is hired by Louis Comfort Tiffany on the basis of her floral sketches. Bringing Driscoll's voice into the story with quotations from her letters, Goldman Rubin's text-heavy pages also delve vividly into the process of making intricate glass art. Chapman balances the in-depth storytelling with saturated watercolor, gouache, and cut paper illustrations have a glimmering quality reminiscent of creations of the "Tiffany Girls." As the subject's career takes off, a brief parallel visual story unfolds along the bottom of the page, underscoring the role that memories of home inspired Driscoll's creative process. Driscoll appeals as a fascinating figure in this immersive historical read. Background characters are portrayed with various skin tones. Back matter includes author and artist notes and resources. Ages 6–9.