Stained glass window ca. 1877-80 Daniel Cottier This window is securely attributed to Daniel Cottier, a glass stainer and ultimately decorator and dealer who began his career in Glasgow, moved to London where he perfected his mature aesthetic style, and then in 1873 opened a workshop in New York under the name "Cottier & Co., Upholsterers, Fine Cabinet Makers, Glass strainers, etc., Art Rooms." Cottiers first major stained-glass commission in this country was for Trinity Church in Boston (1878-79), but his work is found in other contexts in the Northeast, earlier and later. He is generally credited with being the first to introduce the Aesthetic style to America.Cottier, like John La Farge, was among the first to introduce new floral subject matter to stained glass, epitomized by this window. The window relates closely to a three-panel window made for the Newport house of W. Watts Sherman in 1877-78, and now in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. This is a quintessentia

Stained glass window ca. 1877-80 Daniel Cottier This window is securely attributed to Daniel Cottier, a glass stainer and ultimately decorator and dealer who began his career in Glasgow, moved to London where he perfected his mature aesthetic style, and then in 1873 opened a workshop in New York under the name "Cottier & Co., Upholsterers, Fine Cabinet Makers, Glass strainers, etc., Art Rooms." Cottiers first major stained-glass commission in this country was for Trinity Church in Boston (1878-79), but his work is found in other contexts in the Northeast, earlier and later. He is generally credited with being the first to introduce the Aesthetic style to America.Cottier, like John La Farge, was among the first to introduce new floral subject matter to stained glass, epitomized by this window. The window relates closely to a three-panel window made for the Newport house of W. Watts Sherman in 1877-78, and now in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. This is a quintessentia
SuperStock offers millions of photos, videos, and stock assets to creatives around the world. This image of Stained glass window ca. 1877-80 Daniel Cottier This window is securely attributed to Daniel Cottier, a glass stainer and ultimately decorator and dealer who began his career in Glasgow, moved to London where he perfected his mature aesthetic style, and then in 1873 opened a workshop in New York under the name "Cottier & Co., Upholsterers, Fine Cabinet Makers, Glass strainers, etc., Art Rooms." Cottiers first major stained-glass commission in this country was for Trinity Church in Boston (1878-79), but his work is found in other contexts in the Northeast, earlier and later. He is generally credited with being the first to introduce the Aesthetic style to America.Cottier, like John La Farge, was among the first to introduce new floral subject matter to stained glass, epitomized by this window. The window relates closely to a three-panel window made for the Newport house of W. Watts Sherman in 1877-78, and now in the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. This is a quintessentia by Piemags/PL Photography Limited is available for licensing today.
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