Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
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A work made of oak.

Desk, 1908

Frank Lloyd Wright

A framed glass window featuring a geometric stylized depiction of an organic form resembling wheat in clear, green, and golden tones, repeated three times.

Darwin D. Martin House: "Tree of Life" Window, 1904

Frank Lloyd Wright

A work made of oak, laminated wood, leather, jute webbing, and horsehair.

Side Chair, 1910

George Grant Elmslie

A herondz silhouette sits amongst the brush in a golden hued forest.

The Home of the Heron, 1893

George Inness

A work made of oak and upholstery.

Side Chair, 1904

Frank Lloyd Wright

A work made of oil on canvas.

The Coffee House, Winter 1905–6

Alson Skinner Clark

A work made of oak and pine.

Library Table, 1896

Frank Lloyd Wright

A work made of favrile glass and bronze.

Lily Lamp, 1902–17

Tiffany Studios (Firm)

A work made of leaded favrile glass.

Lilies (Corey Memorial Window), 1892–95

Louis Comfort Tiffany

A work made of bronze.

Bust from the Adams Memorial, Modeled 1892–93, cast 1912

Augustus Saint-Gaudens

A work made of porcelain painted in underglaze blue.

Vase with Figures, Landscape, and Auspicious Symbols, Qing dynasty (1644–1911), Kangxi period (1662–1722)

A work made of multilayered leaded glass and steel.

Window, c. 1900

Harvey Ellis

A work made of porcelain painted in underglaze blue.

Bulbous Vase with Stylized Vines, Qing dynasty (1644–1911), Yongzheng period (1723–35)

A work made of oil on canvas.

Self-Portrait, 1898–1906

Frederick William MacMonnies

A work made of silver, enamel, and amber.

Box, 1920–30

Rebecca Cauman

A work made of oil on canvas mounted on board.

The Essex Canal, c. 1896

Albert Pinkham Ryder

A work made of oil on canvas.

An Alcove in the Art Students' League, 1888

Charles Courtney Curran

A work made of oil on canvas.

White Heron in a Pool in a Garden, c. 1929

Frank Weston Benson

A work made of oak with white pine.

Sideboard, 1876–80

Herter Brothers

A work made of brown-stained oak.

Armchair, 1904–5

J.S. Ford, Johnson and Company

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