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Labels: children's book illustration, goudy, melissa etheridge, ww denslow
Labels: children's book illustration, goudy, melissa etheridge, ww denslow
Labels: book review, gustave baumann, hiroshi yoshida, ohara koson, toshi yoshida
Labels: albert weisgerber, charles rennie mackintosh, degas, dugald stewart walker, jessie willcox smith, julius klinger, maurice biais, norbertine von bresslern-roth
Labels: book review
Labels: 60sposters, a roller, andri ferdinand, chris johnson, david goines, ferdinand hodler, henri van de velde, jan toorop, joseph sattler, ludwig hohlwein, ludwig von hofman, Victor Moscoso, wes wilson, wilhelm schulz
Labels: charles osborn, edward c moore, louis comfort tiffany, metalwork, timeline
Jeannette McKean grew up in the gracious Kenwood section of Chicago in the Richardson Romanesque-style mansion her grandfather had built and later gave to her parents as a wedding gift. The home was richly detailed with stained-glass windows and carved mahogany cabinetry, and her artistic mother, Elizabeth Morse Genius, bought American Impressionist paintings, many of which are in the Morse collection today, to hang on the walls. As with many wealthy families of the period, the Geniuses also collected Tiffany glass.
In 1942 she founded the Morse Gallery on campus and named Hugh F. Mc- Kean, then a Rollins art professor, as its director. In 1945, Hugh and Jeann- ette were married.
Thirteen years after she founded the Morse Gallery, Jeannette McKean staged an exhibition, "Works of Art by Louis Comfort Tiffany," that was the first serious showing of Tiffany work since the turn of the century. For decades Tiffany's work had fallen from favor, but Jeannette McKean, remembering the satiny, iridescent glass in her family home, still thought his work exceptionally elegant.
Labels: edward c moore, glass, louis comfort tiffany, metalwork, nancy