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The most striking thing about the stained glass windows at Trinity is the varying styles, techniques, and interpretation. Individual windows, or groups of windows, have dramatically distinct artistic "personalities." But taken together, these windows mark a significant crossroads in the evolution of 19th century stained glass work and represent almost all of the major stained glass studies of the 19th and early 20th centuries. Traditional European Window Designs The premier English workshops - Burlison & Grylls, Daniel Cottier & Co., Henry Holiday, and Clayton & Bell - received the bulk of the first commissions in 1877 and 1878. The work these companies had done in Anglican churches was known and admired by Rector Phillips Brooks and the Trinity Stained Glass Committee. But Brooks had an eye for progressive English design as well. Four windows completed in 1882 (including the three with rich green backgrounds on the Boylston Street, or north transept, side) were designed by the English Pre-Raphaelite painter Edward Burne-Jones and executed by William Morris & Co. These contain the unmistakable mannered line and decorative patterning of the flowering English Arts and Crafts Movement. The cool, bright colors and baroque style of the windows on the John Hancock - or south transept - side of the building may seem almost out of place to some. Ornate French windows like these designed by A. Oudinot of Paris were more typically found in Roman Catholic churches. Speculation is that the donors, the Ritchies, who were living in Paris at the time, gave the commission to a favored French stained glass maker. A New American Voice: John La Farge With his experiments in opalescent glass, La Farge was able to create new colored effects, shading, and three-dimensional space, not by the traditional method of painting on glass, but by skillfully arranging pieces of glass in layers, a process called plating. Louis Comfort Tiffany, a rival of La Farge, later incorporated these techniques in his own work. It has puzzled historians why American John La Farge - who had worked so closely with Brooks and Richardson in the painted decoration of the sanctuary - wasn't given an early window commission. After all, La Farge's first commission, Christ Preaching of 1883 (the stunning three panel clerestory window with the brilliant turquoise background on the west end of the church), and the La Farge windows that followed - The New Jerusalem, The Resurrection, and The Presentation of the Virgin - are extraordinary, radical in technique, vision, and treatment, and infinitely appropriate for Brooks' ministry and the mission of his parish. But La Farge didn't patent - or perfect - his use of layered opalescent glass until 1879, and the experiments he had completed at the time Trinity was constructed, including those at Memorial Hall at Harvard, hadn't been particularly successful. But Christ Preaching demonstrated the brilliant effects that could be achieved by La Farge's technique of layering up to eight sheets of different types, colors, and magnitudes of glass. It is believed that The New Jerusalem window contains virtually every kind of glass La Farge ever used - including pressed jewels, confetti glass, and opalescent glass - a stained-glass tour de force. A Hometown Voice: Sarah Wyman Whitman |