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In Company of Angels exposition
Stained glass panels by Louis Comfort Tiffany

IN COMPANY OF ANGELS

Traveling exposition In Company of Angels by Louis Comfort Tiffany

The stained glass windows of angels in this exhibition were created in 1902 for a Swedenborgian church in Cincinnati. The rare windows were displaced when the church was razed in 1964 for highway construction. The eight-foot-tall windows were crated and remained for almost 40 years in parishioners’ garages and basements.

Posted 20 July 2013

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IN COMPANY OF ANGELS
The stained glass windows of angels in this exhibition were created in 1902 for a Swedenborgian church in Cincinnati. The rare windows were displaced when the church was razed in 1964 for highway construction. The eight-foot-tall windows were crated and remained for almost 40 years in parishioners’ garages and basements. They were brought from Ohio to Pennsylvania in a U-Haul truck to a barn on a Swedenborgian church property in 1991. A new minister opened the unmarked crates in 2001. The windows portray the angels of the early Christian churches of Asia Minor (in present-day Turkey). Each full-length angel holds a gift that God promised if the churches would reform their ways. Each angel has a slightly different stance and type of garment, lending individuality to a group united by their flame-like wings against the sky. Text panels introduce visitors to the historical background, the artistic qualities and the spiritual inspiration of the window series, which Tiffany named “Angels Representing Seven Churches.”

Historic Waco Foundation and Lee Lockwood Scottish Rite Library & Museum
Waco, Texas

November 2, 2013 - January 25, 2014
The mission of the non-profit Historic Waco Foundation is to collect, maintain, preserve, publish and interpret the heritage and history of Waco, McLennan County and Texas. HWF owns and operates four historic house museums: Earle-Napier-Kinnard House, Fort House, East Terrace, and the McCulloch House. These house museums date from 1858 to 1884. In addition to maintaining the four historic house museums, Historic Waco Foundation also produces a biannual journal, “Waco Heritage & History," Christmas on the Brazos, and various special exhibits.
http://www.historicwaco.org
Waco is also home to the Lee Lockwood Library and Museum. This magnificent building was erected in 1967 by the Scottish Rite Masons of Texas. It offers three floors of exhibits on Freemasonry in Europe, North America and Texas. Many aspects of American, Texas and local history are also highlighted inside the building.

Oshkosh Public Museum
Oshkosh, Wisconsin
February 7 - May 11, 2014
For more than 80 years, the Oshkosh Public Museum has been entrusted with the documentation, preservation, care, management and exhibition of artifacts, photographs, film and archival materials representing all aspects of Oshkosh’s people and heritage. The Museum’s archives hold an extensive collection of more than 47,000 historic photographs and 1,078 linear feet of archival records in remarkable condition. The Museum collections encompass approximately 75,000 objects that relate to the community’s past and the broader context of national history. The Oshkosh Public Museum is the second-oldest public museum in the state of Wisconsin and is accredited by the American Association of Museums.

Texas A&M University
Forsyth Galleries
College Station, Texas
July 17 - October 12, 2014
Home of the Bill (‘35) & Irma Runyon Art Collections, the Forsyth Galleries house one of the world’s most extraordinary collections of English Cameo Glass, works by Louis Comfort Tiffany, Steuben Glass Works, and Mount Washington Glass Company. The Forsyth Galleries of Texas A&M University is an educational and cultural institution dedicated to stimulating public awareness and disseminating knowledge of the arts. We accomplish this by collecting, exhibiting, preserving and interpreting works of art to enrich educational, cultural and artistic communities regionally, nationally, and internationally. This effort is in support of the educational goals of the University, embracing its values of academic excellence, social justice and freedom of inquiry.

Museum of Art, Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute
Utica, New York
October 25, 2014 - January 4, 2015
The Museum of Art traces its origins to a bequest by the Williams and Proctor families of American and European paintings, and decorative arts. A renowned art collection, fascinating exhibitions, and education programs for all ages are presented in a landmark 1960 International-style building designed by Philip Johnson and in historic Fountain Elms, a superbly restored 1850 Italianate mansion The art collection features more than 25,000 American 20th and 21th-century paintings, drawings, sculptures, 19th-century decorative arts, photographs, European paintings, and European and Asian works on paper. Touring exhibitions feature selections from major collections worldwide. Fountain Elms has been restored as a showcase for the finest in Victorian-era decorative arts. Galleries offer changing exhibitions of nineteenth-century furniture, silver, ceramics, glass, textiles, and the renowned Proctor watch collection.

http://incompanywithangels.org

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