Stained Glass WindowsWillet Hauser Architectural Glass
First Presbyterian ChurchFirst Presbyterian ChurchTulsa, OKlahomaTulsa, OKlahoma
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Stained glass windows designed forthe
First Presbyterian Church of Tulsa and
The New Worship Center
Each of the nine nave windows focus on a central theme and feature symbols that recall related events in the life of Jesus Christ and His Church. They are located in the North and South sides of the Nave.
OLD SANCTUARY NAVEOLD SANCTUARY NAVE
The iconography for the nave windows stems from the “I Ams” depicted in the existing Christ, the Light of the World window, installed in 1967.
Design for a nave window showing the quarried transom and lower panels.
Wi ndo w 1 - Bi rth of Chr is tI c am e f orth fro m the Fa the r an d a m Com e into th e W orl d.
Window 2: Preparation for Christ’s MinistryI am the Way, the Truth, and the Life.
Window 3: Christ’s Public MinistryI am the Light of the World.
Window 4: Christ’s Intimate MinistryI am the Eternal One.
Window 5: Christ’s Ministry of MiraclesI am the Bread of Life and Healing.
Window 6: Christ’s focus on the various affirmations that He is the MessiahI am the Son of God.
Window 7: Passion WeekI am Come that They Might Have Life.
Window 8: Resurrection and AscensionI am the Resurrection and the Life.
Window 9: Pentecost and the Ongoing ChurchI am the Vine, Ye are the Branches.
Rendering of Ornamental Nave ClerestoriesLocated above Nave windows
Good Shepherd windowSanctuary, West Wall
Adaptive reuse of pre-existing Good Shepherd window by Frederick J. Wiley, Paris & Wiley, New York. After a painting by Berhard Plockhorst 1825-1907
The New Worship Center
ATRIUMEast Elevation
Transom Rose WindowAtrium Courtyard, above entrance
East Elevation
Pair of single lancet windowsAtrium TowerEast Elevation
ATRIUMSouth Elevation
Ornamental rose window Atrium Tower
South Elevation
Ornamental Transom window with Rose Tracery
Atrium EntranceSouth Elevation
ATRIUMNorth Elevation
Ornamental rose window Atrium Tower
North Elevation
Ornamental Transom with Rose Tracery
Atrium EntranceNorth Elevation
SANCTUARY
History of Presbyterianism in TulsaSanctuary
East Elevation
History of Presbyterianism in Tulsa, detail
History of Presbyterianism in Tulsa, detail
History of Presbyterianism in Tulsa, detail
Tenets of PresbyterianismThree lancet Chancel
windowSanctuary, South Elevation
Single lancet traceried windowsOrnamental
Sanctuary, South Elevation Two pairs, each located on either side of Chancel window
Creation rose window featuring the Six Days of CreationSanctuary, North Elevation
Pair of ornamental single lancet traceried windowsSanctuary, North Elevation
Flanking Creation rose window
DESIGNERS
MARK KHAISMAN(designed Old Sanctuary Nave windows)
Mark Khaisman was born in Kiev, Ukraine in 1958. He studied art and architecture at Moscow Architectural University. Following his graduation in 1981, Khaisman worked as an architect, artist and icon painter. After coming to the United States Mr. Khaisman taught a brief course on icon painting at the Fleisher Art Memorial Art School in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His career at Willet Stained Glass Studio began in 1991 after several sources, almost simultaneously, mentioned the studio to him. Khaisman continues to live and work in Philadelphia as a stained glass designer for Willet Hauser Architectural Glass and as an exhibiting artist. His work has been exhibited throughout the United States and Europe. Samples of Khaisman’s artwork outside of stained glass, as well as a list of his exhibitions and awards, can be viewed at www.khaismanstudio.com.
KENNETH CROCKER(designed New Worship Center windows)
Kenneth Crocker was born in England in 1934. He began his five-year stained glass apprenticeship with J. Whippell and Co, Exeter, England, on his fifteenth birthday. He worked under the tutelage of Arthur Erridge, George Cooper Abbs, and Frederick Cole, some of England’s finest stained glass artists of the day. The apprenticeship required work in the shop on all steps of the stained glass process for four days a week, and formal instruction at Exeter College of Art one day and two evenings a week. At the termination of his apprenticeship, he began drawing cartoons and designing. In 1952 and 1955, he received the annual diploma of merit from the Worshipful Company of Glaziers and Painters of Glass, the English guild of stained glass artisans; and in 1953 a scholarship (that is, a money grant awarded for excellence) from the same group. Kenneth was elected to the British Society of Master Glass Painters in March of 1961. In 1962, Crocker came to the United States to work for Willet Studios. He left Willet in 1972 and established his own studio. He closed this operation and returned to England in 1991, where he re-established himself with Willet Studios as a free-lance designer. In 1996, he returned to the United States and continues designing fine stained glass for Willet Hauser Architectural Glass, the newly named organization combining Willet Studios and Hauser Art Glass.