
The Tiffany girls on the roof of the Tiffany studios in 1904; inset, the Wisteria lamp from 1901. (Photos courtesy New York Historical Society)
The lights are dimmed in the galleries of the Flagler Museum, bringing a liturgical hush to the illuminated beauty of the Tiffany lamps and windows on display.
Indeed, the brilliantly colored glass mosaics that make up the lampshades and windows constitute most of the light.
If people don’t genuflect before these works of art, it won’t be because Louis Comfort Tiffany and his staff didn’t deserve it.
The exhibition is titled "A New Light on Tiffany: Clara Driscoll and the Tiffany Girls," and it’s primarily drawn from the collection of the New York Historical Society. The focus is the work of Clara Driscoll, a girl born in the middle of the 19th century in Tallmadge, Ohio, who went to school in Cleveland then headed for New York to seek her fortune.
What she found was a job as the supervisor of Tiffany’s glass-cutting operation, which numbered 35 women, and a loosely defined, but more important, job as a designer.
Driscoll’s contributions were largely unknown until her correspondence was discovered in 2005 at the Queens Historical Society and Kent State University.
Aside from giving scholars a great deal of information about just how the Tiffany studio worked, the letters also forced historians to revise their judgment that Tiffany himself had functioned as his own primary design director.









