EilkerJaiill lent Tiffany Peacock Vase, circa 1900, Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, gift of Stanley Siegel, from the Stanley Siegel Collection Triumph Jewish collectors and art dealers helped facilitate resurgence of interest in the work of a master glass artist. I Suzanne Chessler Special to the Jewish News ongregation Shearith Israel,New York City's Spanish and Portuguese synagogue, offers. tours to famil- iarize visitors with the history of North America's oldest Jewish congregation and point out the artistry of the building. Members of the synagogue, which was founded in 1654, in recent years supported a restora- tion of the structure to its origi- nal appearance as seen in 1897. The main sanctuary was C designed by Louis Comfort Tiffany (1848-1933), who created windows with levels of colors, moving upward from brown earth tones to sky blues. Brightening and beautifying religious edifices, regardless of the faith followed in each one, represented important commis- sions for the glass artist, who developed the style that today- garners worldwide popularity and recognition. The artist, son of Tiffany & Co. founder and jewelry magnate Charles Lewis Tiffany, had a priv- ileged upbringing and mapped out a colorful life of his own. Although his works had reached great success, there had been dif- ficult times and loss of favor that Jewish art dealers and patrons helped overcome. The artist, his artwork and admirers come to attention with an exhibit running through April 30 at the Toledo Museum of Art: "Louis Comfort Tiffany: Artist for the Ages" assembles more than 120 examples of Tiffany's talents. Jewish Support Organized thematically, the exhi- bition features stained-glass win- dows, mosaics, enamels, pottery, paintings, photography, metal- work, furniture and jewelry. The objects are arranged according to recurring themes, such as nature, antiquities, archaeology and abstractions. The namesake catalogue (Scala Publishers; $49.95) that accompanies the exhibit has essays and pictures to explore Tiffany's work as a craftsman, technological innovator and manufacturer. Essayist Martin Filler, architecture and design critic, has done considerable research into Tiffany's life, is familiar with the support of the Jewish community and discussed it with The Jewish News. "Samuel Bing, a Paris dealer in decorative arts, was Jewish and the biggest early promoter of Window Panel with Swimming Fish, circa 1890, leaded glass, from the Mark Twain House and Museum in Hartford, Conn. 42 February 23 2006 iN Tiffany," Filler says. "Bing was very influential and had exhibition stands at some of the turn-of-the- century world fairs. "These fairs, before mass media, was the big way of getting a high level of inter- national audience to see artists' work. In the catalogue, there's an illustra- tion of a golden, urn-shaped Tiffany vase in an ivory presenta- tion case, and that was some- thing that Tiffany made on the request of Bing as a special showpiece." Filler explains that Tiffany was a strong entrepreneur and eager to become part of the interna- tional art glass scene. Although Tiffany was an innovator, he became more conservative in the 1920s in response to changes in public attitude and the market. With the Depression, interest in Tiffany's work became dormant. Resurgence New interest was brought to Tiffany's designs after his death, particularly with the help of a Jewish New York dealer, Lillian Brimberg Nassau, whose son, Paul, continues to operate Lillian Nassau Limited. "Lillian went door to door to buy old gold during the Depression:' Filler says. "In the course of this new career, she was asked sometimes if she was interested in buying other things, and she began a small trade in bric-a-brac and eventually opened a shop. "Lillian dealt in Art Nouveau furniture and Tiffany pieces. By the end of World War II, she was developing a trade in Tiffany and was probably the best source in America, if not the world." Nassau's clientele included people involved with the Museum of Modern Art. "Several of the impor- tant people associ- ated with the museum were buying Tiffany pieces from Lillian and later donat- ing them to the permanent col- lection of the museum;' Filler says. "One of the key figures was Edgar Kaufmann Jr., the son of the owner of the Pittsburgh department store (who commis- sioned Frank Lloyd Wright to design and build Fallingwater for his family). "The son became a design curator at the museum and was a passionate Tiffany collector. This was an important turning point as Tiffany pieces went from obscurity in the late 1940s and early 1950s to having advocates resurrecting the artist's reputa- tion." Nassau's Jewish clients have included record producer and media mogul David Geffen as well as star entertainer Barbra Streisand and singer Paul Simon. Artist Appreciation "There often was something affordable to buy at Lillian's," Filler says. "She used to have a big trunk of Tiffany test tiles in her basement. "I was one of the people who would go there in the 1970s, sit on the floor in her basement and rummage through the tiles to pick out the ones I liked most. These were the little square glass tiles that Tiffany had used to test mixtures of colors, and they cost about $20 or $30." The tile prices were quite dif- ferent from what Tiffany works