The Fascinating Life & Legacy of Louis Comfort Tiffany: Inside His New York Mansion

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  • Опубліковано 8 вер 2024
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    When we think about Tiffany and Company, we might imagine some of the world’s finest products, but how much do you know about the designer who set their legacy in motion?
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    Public Domain Photos From: American Magazine of Art, vol. 11, Library of Congress, New York Times, Google Patents
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 150

  • @ElbowShouldersen
    @ElbowShouldersen Рік тому +134

    Wow... Of all the houses I've seen on this channel, this is the one I most regret losing... It would have been the most remarkable 'museum' of interior design in the country had it not burned down.

    • @sergpie
      @sergpie Рік тому +12

      I wholeheartedly agree. Such an entrancing interior.

    • @SwimBodyEVill
      @SwimBodyEVill Рік тому +9

      Agree. Never seen anything like that. And won’t. :-/

    • @junocespedes6001
      @junocespedes6001 Рік тому +8

      Totally! My favorite mansion from all his channel. It was like experiencing antoni gaudi's house.

    • @MelchorMoore
      @MelchorMoore Рік тому

      I would have loved to tour the house. Looking forward to a trip to the Morse mansion

  • @VRed37
    @VRed37 Рік тому +74

    The mansion and property was so aesthetically designed. How wonderful it would have been to be able to see today.

    • @timelyseeker
      @timelyseeker Рік тому +4

      One of the best in the world because Louis had a neck for design - so it appears, and very gifted as an adult in the mind of a child who loves the magical mysteries of style and design.

  • @gregoryferraro7379
    @gregoryferraro7379 Рік тому +29

    What a tragedy that this house is no longer standing! It is, however, some strange comfort to know that it was destroyed by a fire instead of demolished for a housing development. At least the windows were saved!

    • @karenryder6317
      @karenryder6317 Рік тому +2

      It would have been so wonderful to experience the way in which he blended art, especially art glass, into the forms and functions of architecture. We are fortunate to have the photos at least. Where are they kept?

    • @meganlucek2677
      @meganlucek2677 Рік тому

      @@karenryder6317 they are at the Morse Museum in Winter Park, Fl. Right outside Orlando.

  • @williamtyre523
    @williamtyre523 Рік тому +45

    Thank you for focusing on what I consider to be one of the most artistic houses ever designed and built in the United States. The surviving portions of the house, including the amazing Daffodil Porch, reconstructed at the Morse Museum in Winter Park, Florida, are well worth a visit to see!

    • @matthewcole4753
      @matthewcole4753 Рік тому +2

      The Metropolitan Museum of Art in NYC has the pair of columns at the front of the mansion as seen in the video. There's also a pretty good amount of items from Tiffany's original store, including fragments of the entrance sign, a mosaic fountain, and glassworks that he personally donated to the museum.

  • @kathytrimble4223
    @kathytrimble4223 Рік тому +17

    How wonderful it would be to walk the paths of this magnificent home.

  • @robb2biago
    @robb2biago Рік тому +4

    Wait, what?! There’s a huge Tiffany window collection in Orlando? How did that happen, wow! I taught a conservatory that has the most extraordinary Tiffany Windows. They are so beautiful! It was something I looked forward to every time I taught there. And Liberace studied there decades before I taught there. Thanks for bring this house back to the light.

    • @TheVampirelass
      @TheVampirelass Рік тому +1

      It's in Winter Park, which is just outside Orlando, and my hometown. It's an incredible museum and Winter Park is a beautiful town. Totally worth a visit!

  • @paulajensen9181
    @paulajensen9181 Рік тому +2

    BREAKS my heart how many beautiful homes were lost to fires..

  • @sergpie
    @sergpie Рік тому +20

    What a delightful and innovative interior this home must’ve had in its day. From the sheer amount of craft involved in decorating it, to the interiors flooded with light and covered in orchids and palms. Wow .
    Art nouveau, in my opinion, with its vast variety and it’s respect to both natural and organic forms and rigorous precision, has to be my favorite movement in architecture, art, and ornament. Everything manufactured in that period, in almost every corner of the world, is a marvel to behold. Along with beaux arts, I see it as being among the peaks of human creative expression and development.

  • @jared1870
    @jared1870 Рік тому +16

    So cool to see the house of an artiist. Sad that fire destroyed the house but it is great his student could save the windows. That's the good thing about Tiffany's work. When one of the local mansions burned, the Tiffany window basically popped out of its frame so it was perfectly restored, not one piece lost.

  • @SpanishEclectic
    @SpanishEclectic Рік тому +9

    I'm glad the glass was saved. Interesting style to the house. The flowing designs with themes of nature were popular in Late Victorian homes, and continued on through Art Nouveau. His house, however, seemed to have simpler, cleaner lines, like the later Art Deco look of the 1930s. He definitely had a unique vision.

  • @kellingtonlink956
    @kellingtonlink956 Рік тому +10

    Always fascinating history lessons. I’ve often wondered about how Tiffany Glass was introduced. Thanks for the video.

  • @sharksport01
    @sharksport01 Рік тому +5

    I believe that Erwine and Estelle Laverne lived in the house in the 50's and had a sort of designer commune for thier fabulous furniture, wallpaper and other creations.
    Laverne International.

  • @Th3James
    @Th3James Рік тому +7

    Subbed, forgot I wasn't before. Love seeing these old pictures and the history behind these old mansions. Makes me want a big ass fireplace and sitting room. 60 acre lot and I'd be happy to just afford 1 someday. Just the craftsman work alone is nuts I'm surprised the fire and heat didn't break more of his stained glass. Great video!

  • @davidward805
    @davidward805 Рік тому +7

    It was a very interesting house that obviously had a lot of Tiffany’s beautiful work inside-great that it has been preserved.

  • @pameladulany1457
    @pameladulany1457 Рік тому +1

    I also think this is one if MG very favorite houses. Loved how he brought nature into the house. And the setting on the ocean. Wonderful!!

  • @rebeccablakey2637
    @rebeccablakey2637 Рік тому +4

    This home was beautiful. Some very amazing glass windows that are priceless. Thankfully that amazing glass could be saved and in a museum now.

  • @melodyblair8587
    @melodyblair8587 Рік тому +1

    Very interesting. Incredible home. It’s sad that it’s gone.

  • @TheVampirelass
    @TheVampirelass Рік тому +1

    The Morse Museum is in Winter Parl, Fl, just outside Orlando. It is an incredible Museum, I have been there many times. If you ever get the chance GO! Plus, Winter Park is beautiful. I lived there for many years and the Morse museum was one of my favorite places.

  • @laurab8450
    @laurab8450 Рік тому +1

    Very interesting! It's a shame so many famous old mansions were lost to fire.

  • @meli73934
    @meli73934 Рік тому +3

    The Morse museum is so lovely! They have whole rooms from the house, the Chapel is amazing. Tiffany summered in Winter Park & had a huge influence on the community

  • @andreamarin4296
    @andreamarin4296 Рік тому +2

    Never knew this existed! I love learning new things. Thank you so much! How incredibly exquisite his house and art was/is. What an extraordinary artist for sure.

  • @tudorjason
    @tudorjason Рік тому +31

    It's inspiring to see historic homes of artists.
    These days, artists will only buy modern homes with straight lines to have blank canvasses to display their art instead of making the home an art installation in itself.

    • @VangoghsDoggo
      @VangoghsDoggo Рік тому +5

      Nah, lots of us like old Victorians like mine. My neighbor, also an artist does stained glass in her 3rd floor studio. Two houses over, the 3rd floor was built as a studio and has a big window for an artist who did pastels and oil paintings, then there is another on the corner where I live. 4 artists in about a block of houses. As far as building our art into the house, it's expensive to do it, really expensive. Most of us are not making the kind of money Tiffany did but we preserve our Victorians and in some cases, restore them because these houses are works of art.

    • @jaybee4118
      @jaybee4118 Рік тому

      That’s not remotely true. Some artists might do, but it’s art collectors that do that. Most artists make their homes a work of art in one way or another.

  • @LillyKC23
    @LillyKC23 Рік тому +5

    Excellent report. Whenever I have the opportunity to see Tiffany's work, I'm on my way! The Winter Park museum is wonderful. However, the most unforgettable display I've seen was the exquisite Art Nouveau jewelry he personally created. It was at an exhibition held at the Klamazoo Institute of Art. Many of his lamps and glasswork were also on display but that jewelry was really amazing! If anyone gets the opportunity to see his jewelry, I can highly recommend it!

    • @vjhreeves
      @vjhreeves Рік тому

      We have his jewelry here in Winter Park at the Morse as well.

  • @JL-ek6zj
    @JL-ek6zj Рік тому +2

    Thank you for this, he was way ahead of his time. What a loss, possibly the most remarkable home of its time, glad to hear one of his students was able to save some of the work! I have always been fascinated by Tiffany's work. My great-grandfather, who lived in Corona, Long Island, knew Louis Tiffany and my grand-mother's first husband was married to one of the artists Tiffany employed. Alas, the marriage did not last and she went on to marry my grandfather. Yes, she kept a few treasured pieces.

  • @calendarpage
    @calendarpage Рік тому +3

    I'm not usually a garden person, but I loved the landscaping here - maybe because it was less formal. I imagine you'd really feel like you were walking in nature. I'm reminded of the family killer, John List. He had lost his job and income and couldn't sustain his big house. He didn't know that the large stained glass skylight was by Tiffany. He could have sold it and solved his financial problems.

  • @whynot2644
    @whynot2644 Рік тому +2

    WOW

  • @crystalclear5684
    @crystalclear5684 Рік тому +1

    The great Tiffany!! This is the most tragic of all the fabulous houses we have lost in time .. his work was absolute poetry in creative genius, and IMO has never really been equaled.
    His extraordinary home was a testament to this... this was his jewel in the crown.
    I heard that during the devastation phase, looters were pulling the lovely stained glass windows apart just for the lead came that the pieces were wrapped in ...🤦

    • @vicrothman1402
      @vicrothman1402 Рік тому

      "never really been equaled."?...check out Tiffany's main stained glass competitor, John LaFarge

  • @mileshigh1321
    @mileshigh1321 Рік тому +4

    If there was one house that should still be around today this should have been it! Tragic a fire had to destroy that place! At least some of the Glass was saved! But imagine what was lost!

    • @ThisHouse
      @ThisHouse  Рік тому

      Of all the houses I’ve covered, this one would have been in my top 5 to see in person! Agreed, a complete tragedy to have lost it.

  • @lindafurr2404
    @lindafurr2404 Рік тому

    Even though all I saw was a few black & white photos this is my favorite house.

  • @lauralousherbert5197
    @lauralousherbert5197 Рік тому +1

    On 22ed of December 2022 ..
    I went to the Museum IT IS AMAZING.
    The Best time to go is in the Morning or On Friday When open Late Because of the Traffic..
    (Tuesday through Thursday and Saturday, 9:30 a.m.-4 p.m.. Friday, 9:30 a.m.-8 p.m.. Sunday, 1 p.m.-4 p.m.. Closed Monday and most major holidays).
    I found going before a Holiday is a good time less crowded.

  • @lisaharrington6488
    @lisaharrington6488 Рік тому

    Beautiful home. So sad that it was destroyed. Thank you for sharing!

  • @kennethcrawford3888
    @kennethcrawford3888 Рік тому +1

    love how these fires just happen--hummmm

  • @Shelly-mz9yf
    @Shelly-mz9yf Рік тому

    Whoa.... a moment here. To breathe and respect. 🙂 history at its greatest. Now on with video thank you for sharing

  • @deborahburnette1218
    @deborahburnette1218 Рік тому +1

    Thank you so much for the video 😊

  • @ibuguru
    @ibuguru Рік тому +1

    What a tragic loss to the world of art and architecture to have it all destroyed by such a catastrophic fire. This could well be one of the greatest losses of a magnificent home in the US. How incredibly sad.

  • @judithl.morton9178
    @judithl.morton9178 Рік тому +2

    I see a lot of houses on UA-cam but this one so far was just beautiful besides I like Tiffany's work what I've seen of it he made this house absolutely Artful and beautiful

  • @marksherrill9337
    @marksherrill9337 Рік тому +1

    Amazing the new owners didn’t have enough sense to take care of the house. Just goes to show if you don’t work for it, things are taken for granted. I can’t believe they burnt it down. Doubtless an accident, but how careless can you possibly get?

  • @UncaDave
    @UncaDave Рік тому +4

    Great story with a sad ending but wonderful the glass was saved. Do you know what ever happened to the land and residue structure? Would be an interesting epilogue to this video.

  • @retirementbootcampoff-grid237
    @retirementbootcampoff-grid237 Рік тому +1

    The art and architecture from 1900 and 1910 had such delicacy, and was so elegant.

  • @ahearingimpairedperson
    @ahearingimpairedperson Рік тому

    Wow 😍👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👌🏾! I live in O-town, so I will visit the museum

  • @lila6406
    @lila6406 Рік тому

    Beautiful

  • @christopherstephenjenksbsg4944

    I grew up in a church with eight Tiffany stained glass windows. They are beautiful, but they are hard to maintain, with their multiple layers of heavy textured glass.
    St Paul's Episcopal Church in Troy, NY, has what I believe is the only surviving complete Tiffany interior. It is very much worth checking out.

    • @slickone9135
      @slickone9135 Рік тому +1

      Check out St Lukes in Dubuque, Iowa.

  • @clintcountryman4849
    @clintcountryman4849 Рік тому +1

    Great video! I've always loved stained glass

  • @toniadugger3954
    @toniadugger3954 Рік тому

    Stunning & fun 💗

  • @crescentmoonchild4031
    @crescentmoonchild4031 Рік тому +2

    What a beautiful house! It can never be replicated. Frank Lloyd Wright built many houses so if one burned we could still see others but this was one of a kind designed by a very talented artist. I wish we could still visit it. Burning down accidentally is tragic but it would have been more tragic if someone tore it down to replace or rebuild.

  • @boydboyles7303
    @boydboyles7303 Рік тому

    Glad they were saved

  • @IntrepidMilo
    @IntrepidMilo Рік тому

    There is a church in my hometown that has a Tiffany window. Its quite beautiful.

  • @LJB103
    @LJB103 Рік тому +2

    There is an indoor fountain from this house on display at the Metropolitan Museum in NYC. Another big loss is that Theodore Roosevelt had that Tiffany glass screen in the White House destroyed because he didn't like it. The only surviving Tiffany designed house (the Ayer mansion on Commonwealth Avenue in Boston, MA - either this house or the whole street would make a great video) is currently up for sale if you have a spare $15 million lying around. Excellent video.

    • @vicrothman1402
      @vicrothman1402 Рік тому +1

      Teddy lived near Tiffany and they did not get along. This may have lead to Teddy removing the Tiffany work when he was President.

    • @LJB103
      @LJB103 Рік тому

      @@vicrothman1402 Very possibly; he could hold a grudge with the best of 'em. However, his 1902 renovation of the White House (including building the West Wing) took the whole place from dark and stuffy Victorian to what we see today: the lighter, more elegant, French/Georgian classical interior.

    • @vicrothman1402
      @vicrothman1402 Рік тому +1

      @@LJB103 President Roosevelt’s motivations in removing a national treasure might date back to his personal animosity to Tiffany, possibly inspired by the bitter litigation and dispute with the town of Oyster Bay during Tiffany’s acquisition of the property of Laurelton Hall, originally public picnic grounds and an old hotel of the same name.

    • @LJB103
      @LJB103 Рік тому

      @@vicrothman1402 Like I said Teddy could hold a grudge. We also have to remember that what would now be considered a national treasure wasn't thought of as that back in 1902. It was just an out of style item like when upper class Britons melted down "old" sterling pieces to be recast in the newest styles.

  • @jonrussell1690
    @jonrussell1690 Рік тому

    Wow!! Very Beautiful!! I can just imagine walking into his house as. Just being in AWE with the stained glass.

  • @tufthome
    @tufthome Рік тому +1

    Gorgeous never before seen shots of the mansion. Please know that the Morse Museum is in the gorgeous neighboring town of Winter Park, FL - not Orlando proper

    • @vjhreeves
      @vjhreeves Рік тому

      As a long-time resident of WP, thank you!

  • @lisariggs8947
    @lisariggs8947 Рік тому

    A very beautiful and unique home, from a mind who's concept and creations brought timeless beauty for everyone to behold!😄❤️👍

  • @rutheliz75
    @rutheliz75 Рік тому

    Those windows are breath taking. Check out "The Dream Garden" in the lobby of the Curtis Center in Philadelphia by Maxfield Parish and executed by Louis comfort Tiffany.

  • @sillypeople4873
    @sillypeople4873 Рік тому

    Grew up near this property. Always wondered what it looked like. Only the concrete tower remains.

  • @Catbooks
    @Catbooks Рік тому

    What a shame it burned down. I was very interested to see what his mansion was like, so thank you for this! At least some of it was salvaged. Helps take the sting out of it being no more.

  • @nonamenoname4175
    @nonamenoname4175 Рік тому +1

    I lived on Long Island for many years and a friend of mine volunteered at the Guggenheim Preserve on Sands Point, NY. There was a rumor that one of the houses, Falaise, had a Tiffany ceiling which was destroyed during WWII when the military occupied it. I bet a lot of the gold coast mansions had Tiffany glass which was eventually lost/destroyed. Once when I was coming home from a trip to the Hamptons I went into an antique store and came upon a Tiffany lamp. The store owner was asking $10,000 for it. Of course, I didn't have that kind of money. I had no idea Laurelton Hall was in Oyster Bay. If I had known I would have gone looking for the remnants of it. We used to like to explore old gold coast mansions. The video brought back memories and I enjoyed it very much. I'm living on Florida now and will have to check out the Morse Museum!

  • @muffassa6739
    @muffassa6739 Рік тому +1

    I've just found this channel and I love watching your videos of the wonderful homes, I'm subscribed ❤ can't wait to see more videos.

  • @DeanStephen
    @DeanStephen Рік тому +3

    What a loss.

  • @wdjones4735
    @wdjones4735 Рік тому

    I’ve always been a huge Tiffany fan! Thanks for sharing😊

  • @bmom3191
    @bmom3191 Рік тому

    There are Tiffany windows in the church I was married in. They are breathing taking.
    It’s so sad that all that work except for a portion was able to be salvaged.

  • @socialmisfit79
    @socialmisfit79 Рік тому

    I've loved watching your videos and many of the houses but this one is by far my most favorite house you've shown. Absolutely gorgeous!

  • @classactkirk
    @classactkirk Рік тому

    Lost craft..just pure beauty

  • @artworld9799
    @artworld9799 Рік тому

    Wonderful video🌈

  • @susanrice3166
    @susanrice3166 Рік тому

    What a tragic loss of grand architecture! My imagination leaves me to believe that it was the most magnificent building of it's time. Sad ...

  • @JodysJourney
    @JodysJourney Рік тому

    I’m so glad they were able to save the stained glass.

  • @linneab8317
    @linneab8317 Рік тому

    I love visiting interesting estates and historical homes. May I recommend Headley-Whitney in Lexington Kentucky? I absolutely love the Shell Grotto; it's fascinating!

  • @mariakettlehut7399
    @mariakettlehut7399 Рік тому

    Absolutely beautiful. What a talent he had.no heirs?

  • @nycstarport8542
    @nycstarport8542 Рік тому

    In NYC, is the Bowery Mission for the poor. On the second floor is a Beautiful stained glass window, facing the street. It was designed by Steven Tiffany. 🙂

  • @marilynosgood3220
    @marilynosgood3220 Рік тому

    Punctuation would be a nice addition.

  • @nygrl6102
    @nygrl6102 Рік тому +1

    Sanford Bray was the true inventor of the copper foil method, as stated here, Tiffany just purchased the patent. He definitely took it to the next level though.

  • @renierbrown9102
    @renierbrown9102 Рік тому +2

    That wasn't fantastic story I'm really enjoying it

  • @lauriekeikkala9937
    @lauriekeikkala9937 Рік тому

    Fantastic information! I want to go see it all!

  • @walkaboutnewyork3413
    @walkaboutnewyork3413 Рік тому

    Remember there is a difference between Tiffany & Co., founded by Charles Tiffany, and Tiffany Studios founded by Charles’ son, Louise Comfort Tiffany. The former was the jewelry and fine goods store; the latter was a design company, specializing in stained glass windows, lamps, and interior design.

  • @vjhreeves
    @vjhreeves Рік тому

    Correction, please...I live in the city of Winter Park, FL, the home of the Morse Museum. We are very proud of this magnificent museum, which holds the largest collection of Tiffany art in the world, including many of the works seen in this video, such as the complete chapel from chandelier to baptismal font. While we are NEAR Orlando, we are a distinct and separate city.

  • @monkeygraborange
    @monkeygraborange Рік тому +2

    I couldn’t help but notice that in the first photograph of Tiffany as a young man, he appears to be sporting only half a mustache. I wonder if that’s actually real or just some trick of the lighting?

    • @Lv-nq9qz
      @Lv-nq9qz Рік тому

      must be the lighting, because it looks like he has one blue eye and one brown eye

  • @kodyjbosch1
    @kodyjbosch1 Рік тому

    I've heard accounts of many folks on Long island exploring the many ruins of Long Island Country houses - particularly in the 6os and 7os. People who are now known as Urban and Rural Explorers (or Urbexers and Rurexers respectively) Including by friends of mine who grew up on Long Island and later became successful artists in their own right. I've heard some accounts of the exploration whatever remained of Laurelton Hall, problem is over there the greenery (particularly English ivy and kudzu) quickly swallows places and makes them almost wholly indecipherable - it would be interesting to know if any floor plans of Laurelton Hall Survived. But I am grateful to you for providing more imagery of this great house than I have seen thus far. Particularly the sublime interiors - thank you ! ☺️

  • @SpanishEclectic
    @SpanishEclectic Рік тому

    The J.C. League house in Galveston, TX, had some fantastic Tiffany windows. The owner had them removed for conservation and safe storage while she restores the house. They are jaw-dropping. There is a video of this hair-raising operation on her channel.

    • @vjhreeves
      @vjhreeves Рік тому +1

      I live in Winter Park FL, home of the Morse Museum referenced in this video. Every December they bring several of the windows out of museum storage and put them on lit display in the park for viewing while strolling the park. Our Bach choir performs live on the nearby stage. It's a wonderful event.

    • @karenryder6317
      @karenryder6317 Рік тому +1

      If anyone is going to the Morse in Winter Park, FL to see their outstanding Tiffany collection, try to stop at Flagler College in St. Augustine as well. The cafeteria has a full bank of Tiffany windows left over from when the college was a hotel.

    • @vjhreeves
      @vjhreeves Рік тому

      @@karenryder6317 true...although keep in mind they are two hours apart

  • @monl3807
    @monl3807 Рік тому

    And in color

  • @thomascoffin3273
    @thomascoffin3273 Рік тому +1

    When you try to calculate the value of money in 1900, or any other time, and now, you Must use more than just Inflation as a guide: the comparable Purchasing Power of the Dollar. Two Million Dollars for the Tiffany mansion would be closer to One Hundred Million than the Thirty-four that you suggest.

  • @michaelroark2019
    @michaelroark2019 Рік тому

    It was truly a unique house and so advanced in style. It reflects the art nouveau of Vienna and not so much of Belgium or Paris. Certainly it was not the art nouveau of Barcelona and Gaudi.
    The interiors would have been magnificent to see. A real tragedy to have lost it for this country.
    Tiffany was the preeminent example of an art nouveau designer in the US and even for the world.

  • @davidhjortnaes2000
    @davidhjortnaes2000 Рік тому +1

    How could you save the glass if the house is on fire?

  • @maerten9517
    @maerten9517 Рік тому

    Hi there. I love the houses you show but are there some great ones that did not get destroyed? I love it but I find it depressing.

  • @sapereaude5476
    @sapereaude5476 Рік тому +2

    Жаль, что столь прекрасный особняк сгорел. Возможно это был единственный особняк в стиле ар-нуво в Америке, где этот стиль очень редок в отличие от Европы (России в том числе)

  • @emj342
    @emj342 Рік тому +2

    😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲😲

  • @monl3807
    @monl3807 Рік тому

    Wish your videos were longer

  • @leannenuttall5655
    @leannenuttall5655 Рік тому

    Spent a long day at the Morse Museum

  • @PaladinDansesGirlfriend
    @PaladinDansesGirlfriend Рік тому +3

    What’s the land being used for now?

    • @noellem3417
      @noellem3417 Рік тому +1

      Ugly modern houses, LOL

    • @brucesmith3072
      @brucesmith3072 Рік тому

      @@noellem3417 I don't think so, but let's ask moderator. I think it's the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory - where DNA was discovered. Still quite well wooded, it's actually part of
      Laurel Hollow, a toney part of North Shore Long Island, next to Cold Spring Harbor, better known. Am I correct? I had clients there, but never allowed in. It's under
      high security. Some referred to the Labs as the "Tiffany Estate". ??? Old Long Island boy....

    • @noellem3417
      @noellem3417 Рік тому +1

      @@brucesmith3072 Well, Laurelton Hall itself stood roughly where 1478 Laurel Hollow Rd.; Syosset stands now, and I'm sorry, but the area is pretty rife with ugly & poorly-designed McMansions. The lab may be located somewhere in an area of the original 600-acre estate.

    • @brucesmith3072
      @brucesmith3072 Рік тому

      @@noellem3417 Thanks. The CSH Lab is on 25A, waterside. It could have been the Tiffany Glass Factory. I don't know about glass production; might be smelly. I was never
      allowed in: it's high security.

  • @j1st633
    @j1st633 Рік тому +1

    I notice that a few mansions are destroyed by fire. Insurance?

  • @andrewbrendan1579
    @andrewbrendan1579 Рік тому

    I've seen some photos of the Tiffany interiors of the White House. If we could have seen those interiors in color photographs...! Not everyone liked the Tiffany style. I've read that when Theodore Roosevelt was in the White House he not only had the Tiffany glass screen removed but ordered it broken into "...a million pieces"! Margaret Truman said that looking at photos of the East Room that had Tiffany elements added to the "Steamboat Gothic" of the Grant era gave her a headache! I have mixed reactions to Tiffany creations, but would sure like to go back in time to visit the White House while it had Tiffany interiors.

    • @vicrothman1402
      @vicrothman1402 Рік тому +1

      The Tiffany glass screen was sold at auction.

    • @andrewbrendan1579
      @andrewbrendan1579 Рік тому

      @@vicrothman1402 I'm glad T.R.'s Presidential order wasn't carried out. Is there any informatin about where the screen went and if it still exists?

    • @vicrothman1402
      @vicrothman1402 Рік тому +1

      @@andrewbrendan1579
      The Tiffany screen was removed during the 1902 renovation of the White House and sold at auction as boxes of glass for $275. Part of it was installed in the Belvedere Hotel at Chesapeake Beach, Maryland, which was destroyed by fire in 1923.

  • @SKF358
    @SKF358 Рік тому +1

    What's on the grounds now?

  • @steves9905
    @steves9905 Рік тому

    dang, all these homes burning up. wonder what's there now

  • @jvommen
    @jvommen Рік тому

    I find it amazing as a European that so many fantastic landmarks are being destroyed in the US, either by fire or by “investment opportunities”

  • @neilnimmo6483
    @neilnimmo6483 7 місяців тому +1

    Insurance job and land grab. Funny how they had time to get the valuable glass out in time .

  • @Tiffany-fp9rt
    @Tiffany-fp9rt 10 місяців тому +1

    😘😌👈🏽💕

  • @LockportDan
    @LockportDan Рік тому

    Was the portrait by Sorolla saved?

  • @kodyjbosch1
    @kodyjbosch1 Рік тому

    It's a terrible tragedy that Laurelton Hall did not survive (along with his father's Richardson Romanesque mansion in New York City). All of the buildings you discuss have their merits of course, but as Laurelton Hall, like Beauport was a combination of wealth, independent vision - it also strayed from the typical "pattern book" architecture that typified Long Island Country House Architecture, and was a independent vision of a completely unique and incredibly successful artistic genius and extraordinarily refined sensibility. The loss of Laurelton Hall was not only a great disservice to our collective history , but made a gaping void in the continuity of the history of design, Decorative Arts, and Architectural history. Imagine if Frank Lloyd Wright's Taliesin or William Morris' "Red House," or "Beauport," Charles Renee Mackintosh's library at the Glasgow school of art had been lost to tragic accident or succumbed to the wrecking ball ? 😔

    • @karenryder6317
      @karenryder6317 Рік тому

      IMO Tiffany was a better designer/architect than Wright. In Lakeland, FL there is an entire college campus of Wright designed buildings and they simply are not very functional, comfortable or flowing in any way that compares at all to what Tiffany did in just this one lost treasure.

  • @susanlangley4294
    @susanlangley4294 Рік тому

    He had eight children, I wonder why it wasn’t kept in the family?

  • @badapple65
    @badapple65 Рік тому

    Too many beautiful homes burned in the old days. Heating with firewood, and candles for lighting usually the cause. Many masterpieces lost. Even Frank Lloyd Wright had to build his WI home three times (one arson)

  • @BOEHHO89
    @BOEHHO89 Рік тому +2

    Too bad these photos are in black and white .

  • @grumpynomad3551
    @grumpynomad3551 Рік тому

    I like the houses but I don’t care at all who owned them or what they did to acquire them.

  • @johnryman1366
    @johnryman1366 Рік тому

    It was arson, the stained glass was saved but the house burned down?