
Tall Clock
<p>This handsome tall-case clock was designed by the firm of George Grant Elmslie and William Gray Purcell for the Henry Babson House in Riverside, Illinois. Although Louis Sullivan designed the house in 1907, a large part of the scheme—including the built-in and freestanding furniture—was actually executed by Elmslie, who was then working for Sullivan. In 1912 Elmslie and his firm made additions to the house, including eight pieces of furniture. This elegant clock, whose works and nine chimes were imported from Germany, dates from this later commission. Its hands were executed by Chicago metalsmith Robert Riddle Jarvie according to Elmslie’s design. In his concern over creating an organic, harmonious relationship between the interior of a house and its exterior, the Scottish-born Elmslie found a staunch ally in designer George Niedecken, president of Niedecken-Walbridge, a firm based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, which made the clock’s mahogany case.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1912
- Dimensions
- 213.3 × 66 × 40 cm (84 × 26 × 15 3/4 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- George Grant Elmslie
Artist

Textile
Designed by George Grant Elmslie (American, born Scotland, 1871–1952)
Full artist profile →More
More by George Grant Elmslie
Chandelier
1912 · Cast iron
Stamp Box
1912 · Brass
Andirons
1912 · Brass, bronze, and cast iron
Side Chair
1910 · Oak, laminated wood, leather, jute webbing, and horsehair
Carpet
1907 · Linen, cotton and wool, plain weave with supplementary wrapping wefts forming cut pile through a technique known as "Ghiordes knots"
Stencil Design, Edge
1904 · Blueprint on paper
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- George Grant Elmslie
- Year
- 1912
- Dimensions
- 213.3 × 66 × 40 cm (84 × 26 × 15 3/4 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1912-048720
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





