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Wikipedia

Studio glass

Studio glass is the modern use of glass as an artistic medium to produce sculptures or three-dimensional artworks. The glass objects created are intended to make a sculptural or decorative statement. Though usage varies, the term is properly restricted to glass made as art in small workshops, typically with the personal involvement of the artist who designed the piece. This is in contrast to art glass, made by craftsmen in factories, and glass art, covering the whole range of glass with artistic interest made throughout history. Both art glass and studio glass originate in the 19th century, and the terms compare with studio pottery and art pottery, but in glass the term "studio glass" is mostly used for work made in the period beginning in the 1960s with a major revival in interest in artistic glassmaking.

Handmade studio glass using complex techniques to achieve highly detailed patterns through murrine or caneworking, by American artist David Patchen

Pieces are often unique, or made in a small limited edition. Their prices may range from a few hundred to hundreds of thousands of dollars (US).[1] For the largest installations, the prices are in the millions.[2]

Modern glass studios use a great variety of techniques in creating glass artworks, including:

History

From the 19th century, various types of fancy glass started to become significant branches of the decorative arts. Cameo glass was revived for the first time since the Romans, initially mostly used for pieces in a neo-classical style. The Art Nouveau movement in particular made great use of glass, with René Lalique, Émile Gallé, and Daum of Nancy important names in the first French wave of the movement, producing colored vases and similar pieces, often in cameo glass, and also using lustre techniques. Louis Comfort Tiffany in America specialized in secular stained glass, mostly of plant subjects, both in panels and his famous lamps. From the 20th century, some glass artists began to class themselves as sculptors working in glass and as part of the fine arts.

In the early 20th century, most glass production happened in factories. Even individual glassblowers making their own personalized designs would do their work in those large shared buildings. The idea of "art glass" grew – small decorative works in small production runs, often with designs or objects inside.

By the 1970s, there were good designs for smaller furnaces, and in the United States this gave rise to the "studio glass" movement of glassblowers, who worked outside of factories, often in their own buildings or studios. This coincided with a move towards smaller production runs of particular styles. This movement spread to other parts of the world as well.

 
Paperweight with items inside the glass, Corning Museum of Glass

Techniques used in modern studios

Modern glass studios use a great variety of techniques in creating their pieces. The ancient technique of blown glass, where a glassblower works at a furnace full of molten glass using metal rods and hand tools to blow and shape almost any form of glass, is one of the more popular ways to work. Most large hollow pieces are made this way, and it allows the artist to be improvisational as they create their work.

 
A vase being created at the Reijmyre glassworks, Sweden

Another type is flame-worked glass, which uses torches and kilns in its production. The artist generally works at a bench using rods and tubes of glass, shaping with hand tools to create their work. Many forms can be achieved this way with little investment into money and space. Though the artist is somewhat limited in the size of the work that can be created, a great level of detail can be achieved with this technique. The paperweights by Paul Stankard are good examples of what can be achieved with flame-working techniques. In the 21st century, flame-worked glass became commonly used as adornments on functional items. The glass conductor's baton, commissioned by Chandler Bridges for Dr. Andre Thomas, is a clear example of flame-working being used to transform a traditional item into an artistic statement.

Cast glass can be done at the furnace, at the torch or in a kiln. Generally the artist makes a mold out of refractory, sand, or plaster and silica which can be filled with either clear glass or colored or patterned glass, depending on the techniques and effects desired. Large scale sculpture is usually created this way. Slumped glass and fused glass is similar to cast glass, but it is not done at as high of a temperature. Usually the glass is only heated enough to impress a shape or a texture onto the piece, or to stick several pieces of glass together without a glue.

The traditional technique of stained glass is still employed for the creation of studio glass. The artist cuts the glass into shapes and sets the pieces into lead cames which are soldered together. They artist can also use hot techniques in a kiln to create texture, patterns, or change the overall shape of the glass.

Etched glass is created by dipping glass that has an acid resistant pattern applied to its surface into an acid solution. Also an artist can engrave it by hand using wheels. Sandblasting can create a similar effect.

Cold glass is any glass worked without the use of heat. Glass may be cut, chiseled, sandblasted, and glued or bonded to form art objects ranging from small pieces to monumental sculpture.

(more details below)

The studio glass movement

The international studio glass movement originated in America, spreading to Europe, the United Kingdom, Australia and Asia. The emphasis of this movement was on the artist as the designer and maker of one-of-a-kind objects, in a small studio environment. This movement enabled the sharing of technical knowledge and ideas among artists and designers that, in industry, would not be possible.[3]

With the dominance of Modernism in the arts, there was a broadening of artistic media throughout the 20th century. Indeed, glass was part of the curriculum at art schools such as the Bauhaus. Frank Lloyd Wright produced glass windows considered by some as masterpieces not only of design, but of painterly composition as well. During the 1950s, studio ceramics and other craft media in the U.S. began to gain in popularity and importance, and American artists interested in glass looked for new paths outside industry.[3] Harvey Littleton, often referred to as the "Father of the Studio Glass Movement",[4] was inspired to develop studio glassblowing in America by the great glass being designed and made in Italy, Sweden and many other places, and by the pioneering work in ceramics of the California potter Peter Voulkos. Harvey Littleton and Dominick Labino held the now-famous glass workshop at the Toledo Museum of Art in 1962. The goal was to melt glass in a small furnace so individual artists could use glass as an art medium in a non-industrial setting. This was the workshop that would stimulate the studio glass movement that spread around the world. Instead of the large, industrial settings of the past, a glass artist could now work with a small glass furnace in an individual setting and produce art from glass.

Modern regional glass art

Australia

The early glass movement (studio glass) in Australia was spurred on by a visit to Australia by American artist Bill Boysen, who toured the country in the early seventies with a mobile studio. Boysen traveled to Australia in 1974, where he promoted glass artistry by presenting a "revolutionary demonstration of glass blowing"[5] to a gathering of around 250 attendees. Boysen's mobile studio "successfully toured eight eastern states’ venues in ’74, thus greatly enhancing the credibility of hand crafted glass."[6] Boysen's visit is credited with helping "inspire a generation of [Australian] artists to work with glass and eventually led to the creation of the national glass art collection"[5] in Wagga Wagga, Australia. This important collection includes over 450 works of art and is "the most comprehensive public collection of Australian studio glass anywhere."[5] Since that time Australian glass has gained worldwide recognition with Adelaide in South Australia, hosting the International Glass Art Society Conference in 2005 on only its third occasion outside of the U.S. The Ranamok Glass Prize, presented every year from 1994 to 2014, promotes contemporary glass artists living in Australia and New Zealand.[7]

Belgium

Daniël Theys en Chris Miseur from the glass factory Theys & Miseur in Kortrijk-Dutsel [nl], Belgium, which represent Belgian artistic glass work concerning the entire world. In 2015, John Moran co-founded Gent Glas, a public glass studio focused on introducing glass as an artistic medium to the general public. The studio has gone on to invite over 40 visiting artists from 13 different countries.

China

In China, glass art first appeared in the Western Zhou period (1046–771 BC) and was called liuli. One of the oldest artifacts of Chinese liuli, a pair of burial ear cups, was retrieved from the archaeological site of Western Han Dynasty Prince Liu Sheng of Zhongshan in Hebei Province. Across thousands of years, the art gradually diminished until it was resurrected by artists Loretta H. Yang and Chang Yi in 1987 through the first contemporary Chinese liuli art studio Liuligongfang. In 1997, Yang and Chang released their technique and procedure to the public with the purpose of creating a diplomatic platform for education and advancement. The Liuligongfang technique has since become a key cornerstone upon which contemporary Chinese liuli is built with Yang and Chang widely recognized as the pioneers and founders of contemporary Chinese liuli.[citation needed]

Italy

Glass blowing began in the Roman Empire, and Italy has refined the techniques of glass blowing ever since. Until the very recent explosion of glass shops in Seattle (US), there were more on the Island of Murano (Italy) than anywhere else in world. The majority of the refined artistic techniques of glassblowing (e.g., incalmo, reticello, zanfirico, latticino) were developed there. Moreover, generations of blowers passed on their techniques to family members. Boys would begin working at the fornace (actually "furnace"—called "the factory" in English).

Japan

Japanese glass art which was inspired by the studio glass movement of the 1960s has a short history. The first independent glass studios of this period were built by Saburo Funakoshi and Makoto Ito, and Shinzo Kotani in separate places. Yoshihiko Takahashi and Hiroshi Yamano show their works at galleries throughout the world and are arguably Japan's glass artists of note. Yoichi Ohira has worked with great success in Murano with Italian gaffers. The small Pacific island Niijima, administered by Tokyo, has a renowned glass art center, built and run by Osamu and Yumiko Noda, graduates of Illinois State University, where they studied with Joel Philip Myers. Every autumn, the Niijima International Glass Art Festival takes place inviting top international glass artists for demonstrations and seminars. Emerging glass artists, such as Yukako Kojima and Tomoe Shizumu, were featured at the 2007 Glass Art Society exhibition space at the Pittsburgh Glass Center. Toshichi Iwata and Kyohei Fujita were noteworthy Japanese studio glass artists who worked before and after the studio glass movement of the 1960s. Both were active studio glass artists by the late 1940s. Fujita got his start working in the production part of Toshichi Iwata's studio which was founded in 1947.

See also

Mexico

Mexico was the first country in Latin America to have a glass factory in the early sixteenth century brought by the Spanish conquerors. Although traditional glass in Mexico has prevailed over modern glass art, since the 1970s there have been a List of glass artists#Mexico that have given a place to that country in international glass art.

The Netherlands

Glass art in the Netherlands is mainly stimulated by the glass designing and glass blowing factory Royal Leerdam Crystal. Such notable designers as H.P. Berlage, Andries Copier and Sybren Valkema, Willem Heesen (Master Glassblower as well) had a major influence on Dutch glass art. Later the studio glass movement, inspired by the American Harvey Littleton and the new Workgroup Glass founded by Sybren Valkema at the Gerrit Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam led to a new generation of glass artists.

United Kingdom

 
Wind Song Glass, Peter Newsome

Notable centres of glass production in the UK have been St. Helens in Merseyside (the home of Pilkington Glass and the site on which lead crystal glass was first produced by George Ravenscroft), Stourbridge in the Midlands and Sunderland in the North East. Sunderland is now home to the National Glass Centre which houses a specialist glass art course. St. Helens boasts a similar establishment but without the educational body attached. Perthshire in Scotland was known internationally for its glass paperweights. It has always hosted the best glass artists working on small scales, but closed its factory in Crieff, Scotland in January 2002.

Glass artists in the UK have a variety of exhibitions. The Scottish Glass Society hosts a yearly exhibition for members, the Guild of Glass Engravers exhibit every two years and the British Glass Biennale, begun in 2004 is now opening its third show.

British Glass Art owes much to the long history of craft. The majority of its glass blowers who operate small studio furnaces produce aesthetically beautiful though primarily functional objects. Technical skill as a blower is given as much importance as the artistic intent. Other notable Glasshouse artists are Steven Newell, Catherine Hough, Annette Meech and of course Simon Moore. There are a growing number of glass studios in the UK. Many specialize in production glassware while others concentrate on one off or limited edition pieces. An Arts Council funded, non-profit making organisation, the Contemporary Glass Society, founded in 1976 as British Artists in Glass, exists to promote and support the work of glass artists in the UK.[8]

Other glass organisations in the UK are The Guild of Glass Engravers, the Scottish Glass Society and Cohesion. Cohesion is a different sort of entity to the other organisations in that it was specifically founded to promote and develop glass art as a commercial concern. It organises trade events in and around the UK and at the international level. Originally it focused only on artists based the north east of England but has since expanded its remit to cover the whole of the UK.

The Northlands Glass School was established in late 1990s in the far north of Scotland and offers residencies and masterclasses to arts students and established glass artists.

In November 2007 the glass sculpture Model for a Hotel was unveiled as an exhibit on the fourth plinth of Trafalgar Square, London.

United States

The United States has had two phases of development in glass. The first, in the early and mid-1900s, started in the cities of Toledo, Ohio, and Corning, New York, where factories such as Fenton and Steuben were making both functional and artistic glass pieces. Toledo's rich history in glass goes back to the turn of the century when Libbey Glass, Owens-Illinois and Johns Manville led the world in the manufacturing of glass products. Their reputations earned Toledo the title of the "Glass Capital of the World." These industry leaders, along with the Toledo Museum of Art, sponsored the first glass workshop in 1961. This workshop would lead to a new movement in American studio glass.

 
Glass sculpture by Dale Chihuly at a 2005 exhibition in Kew Gardens, London, England. The piece is 13 feet (4 m) high

The American Studio Glass Movement

The second, and most prominent, phase in American glass began in 1962, when then-ceramics professor Harvey Littleton and chemist Dominick Labino began the contemporary glassblowing movement. The impetus for the movement consisted of their two workshops at the Toledo Museum of Art, during which they began experimenting with melting glass in a small furnace and creating blown glass art. Littleton and Labino were the first to make molten glass feasible for artists in private studios. Harvey Littleton extended his influence through his own important artistic contributions and through his teaching and training, including many of the most important contemporary glass artists, including Marvin Lipofsky, Sam Herman (Britain), Fritz Dreisbach and Dale Chihuly.

In 1964, Tom McGlauchlin started one of the first accredited glass programs at the University of Iowa, and Marvin Lipofsky founded the university-level glass program at the University of California at Berkeley. In 1964, Dr. Robert C. Fritz founded a university-level glass program at San Jose State University in San Jose, California. As a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison under Harvey Littleton, Bill H. Boysen built the first glass studio at Penland School of Crafts, in Penland, North Carolina, in 1965. After graduating in 1966, he started the graduate glass program at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, Illinois. Dale Chihuly initiated the glass program at the Rhode Island School of Design in 1969. Tom McGlauchlin joined the Toledo Museum of Art as Professor and Director of Glass in conjunction with the University of Toledo's Art program in 1971.

American Glass Schools and Studios

 
Glass studio in Brooklyn, New York in 2018
 
Glass sculpture by David Patchen from a show in San Francisco. The piece is 30" x 11" x 3" and comprises hundreds of murrine (patterned tiles of glass) and zanfirico cane (rods of woven colors).

The growth of studio glass led to the formation of glass schools and art studios located across the country. The largest concentrations of glass artists are located in Seattle, Ohio, New York, Pennsylvania and New Jersey. San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles/Orange County and Corning, New York also have sizable concentrations of artists working in glass.

The Pilchuck Glass School near Seattle has become a mecca for glass artists from all over the world. Those who attend Pilchuck, either college students or established artists, have the opportunity to attend master classes and exchange skills and information in an environment dedicated solely to glass based arts.

Pittsburgh Glass Center in Pittsburgh has residency programs for artists working in glass, as well as a facility for artists to make use of for their works. Pittsburgh Glass Center offers classes to the public on glassblowing and many other forms of glass art. Philadelphia hosts a small array of glass studios for artists that use glass. Home to the National Liberty Museum (featuring all exhibits by international glass artists), Philadelphia hosts the non-profit P.I.P.E. program, with residencies for artists that use glass as well as metal, electroforming on glass, and bronze casting. The state of Pennsylvania has a long tradition of the production of industrial glass and its influence has quickly been absorbed by artists working in glass.

The Studio of The Corning Museum of Glass,[9] established in 1996, is an internationally renowned teaching facility in Corning, NY. Classes and workshops are held for new and experienced glassworkers and artists. The Studio's residency program brings artists from around the world to Corning for a month to work in The Studio facilities, where they can explore and develop new glassblowing techniques or expand on their current bodies of work; recipients of the Specialty Glass Residency include Beth Lipman, Mark Peiser, Karen LaMonte, and Anna Mlasowsky.[10] Artists working in The Studio have access to the collections of The Corning Museum of Glass, and benefit from the resources of the Rakow Research Library,[11] whose holdings cover the art and history of glass and glassmaking.

Wheaton Arts and Cultural Center,[12] located in the historic glass industry capital of Millville, New Jersey, is a nonprofit art and history education center that is home to the Museum of American Glass, which houses the largest collection of American glass objects in the world. The collection includes historical glass as well as contemporary work from some of the glass world's biggest names. In addition to the museum, WheatonArts operates a world-class glass studio under the creative direction of Hank Murta Adams.[13] The Creative Glass Center of America,[14] which is funded by WheatonArts and crucial to its mission of continuing Millville's legacy in the glass world, hosts a fellowship program exclusively for up-and-coming and mid-career artists working in glass. Well-known alumnae of the CGCA fellowship include Steve Tobin (1983) Kait Rhoads (1997 and 2008), Lino Tagliapietra (1989), Beth Lipman (2001), Gregory Nangle (2006), Deborah Czeresko (2006 and 2010), Angus Powers (2003), and Stephen Paul Day (1992, 1997, 2004, and 2009).[15]

San Jose State University glass program was started by Dr. Robert Fritz in 1964 and is the oldest educational studio glass program in California. Dr. Fritz died suddenly in 1986 and Mary B. White ran the program from 1986-2005.

Techniques and processes

Stained glass

Stained glass, such as the windows that are seen in churches, are windows that contain an element of painting in them. The window is designed. After the glass has been cut to shape, paint that contains ground glass is applied, so that, when it is fired in a kiln, the paint fuses onto the glass surface. Following this process, the sections of glass are placed together and held in place with lead came that is then soldered at the joints.

Leadlights and stained glass are manufactured in the same way, but leadlights do not contain any sections of glass that have been painted.

Blown glass

Glassblowing is one of the most used technique for creating "art glass" and is still favoured by most of today's studio glass artists. This is because of the artist's intimacy with the material, and an almost infinite opportunity for creativity and variation at almost every stage of the process. Glassblowing can be used to create a multitude of shapes and can incorporate color through a wide range of techniques. Coloured glass can be gathered out of a crucible, clear glass can be rolled in powdered colored glass to coat the outside of a bubble, it can be rolled in chips of glass, it can be stretched into rods and incorporated through caneworking, or it can be layered, cut and fused into tiles, and incorporated into a bubble of glass for intricate patterns through murrine. "Blown glass" refers only to individually hand-made items but can include the use of moulds for shaping, ribbing, and spiking to produce decorative bubbles. Glass blown articles must be made of compatible glass or the stress in the piece will cause a failure.

Lampworking

Similar to glassblowing, Lampworking (also called flameworking or torchworking) is a style in which the artist manipulates glass with the use of a torch – rather than a blowpipe or blow tube – on a smaller scale. Once in a molten state, the glass is formed by blowing and shaping with tools and hand movements. Though typical lampworking art takes the form of beads, figurines, marbles, small vessels, Christmas tree ornaments, and other such things, it is also used to create scientific instruments as well as glass models of animals and botanical subjects.

Kiln-formed glass

Kiln formed glass is usually referred to as warm glass, and can be either made up from a single piece of glass that is slumped into or over a mould or different colours and sheets of glass fused together. The process of hot glass is highly scientific in that the types of glass and temperatures that they must be fired at is quite complicated operation to undertake correctly. Art glass that is kiln formed usually take the form of dishes, plates or tiles. Glass that is fused in a kiln must be of the same co-efficient of expansion (CoE). If glass that does not have the same CoE is used for fusing, the differing rates of contraction will cause minute stress fractures to form and, over time, these fractures will cause a piece to crack. The use of polarizing filters to inspect the work will determine if stress fractures are present.

Cold glass

Cold glass is worked by any method that does not use heat. Processes include sandblasting, cutting, sawing, chiseling, bonding and gluing.

Sandblasting

Glass can be decorated by sandblasting the surface of a piece in order to remove a layer of glass, thereby making a design stand out. Items that are sandblasted are usually thick slabs of glass into which a design has been carved by means of high pressure sandblasting. This technique provides a three-dimensional effect but is not suitable for toughened glass as the process could shatter it.

Copperfoil technique

The technique of using copperfoil is mainly used in the construction of smaller pieces such as Tiffany style lamps, and it was, in fact, frequently used by Louis Comfort Tiffany. It consists of wrapping cut sections of glass in a self-adhesive tape that is made out of thin copper foil. This technique requires a great deal of dexterity and is also very time-consuming. After the sections have been foiled, they are soldered together in order to form the item.

Gallery

See also

Sources

  • The End William Warmus Glass Magazine Autumn 1995
  • Warmus, William (2003). Fire and form : the art of contemporary glass. West Palm Beach, Fla. Seattle, WA: Norton Museum of Art Distributed by University of Washington Press. ISBN 978-0-943411-39-2. OCLC 52149531. Contains a detailed Chronological Bibliography of Contemporary Glass compiled with assistance of Beth Hylen
  • Lynn, Martha (2004). American studio glass, 1960-1990. New York: Hudson Hills Press. ISBN 978-1-55595-239-6. OCLC 53939804.
  • Oldknow, Tina (2020). Venice and American studio glass. Milano: Skira. ISBN 978-88-572-4387-0. OCLC 1200593335.

References

  1. ^ "Bonhams : 20th Century Decorative Arts". www.bonhams.com. Retrieved 2017-09-23.
  2. ^ "artnet.com Magazine Features – Art Market Guide 2003". www.artnet.com. Retrieved 2017-09-23.
  3. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2008-01-12. Retrieved 2007-10-14.
  4. ^ "Harvey K. Littleton". Smithsonian American Art Museum. Retrieved 26 September 2010.
  5. ^ a b c "Blow-in Bill leaves locals glassy-eyed." Weekly Times (Australia), 31 August 2005: 95.
  6. ^ Skillitzi, Stephen (16 January 2009). "Australian Glass Pioneers". Glass Central Canberra. Retrieved 27 February 2013.
  7. ^ . Bullseye Gallery. Bullseye Gallery. 12 August 2014. Archived from the original on 22 October 2014. Retrieved 22 October 2014.
  8. ^ "The Contemporary Glass Society".
  9. ^ "The Studio". cmog.org.
  10. ^ "Specialty Glass Residency | Corning Museum of Glass". www.cmog.org. Retrieved 2020-02-24.
  11. ^ "Rakow Research Library". cmog.org.
  12. ^ "WheatonArts » Explore, Experience, Discover". Wheaton Arts and Cultural Center.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-05-12. Retrieved 2013-01-05.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-01-14. Retrieved 2013-01-05.
  15. ^ "Past Fellows". Wheaton Arts and Cultural Center. WheatonArts. Retrieved 21 August 2014.

Further reading

  • Studio glass in The Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1996.

External links

  • Glasstress – Contemporary artists and glass at the Biennale of Venice
  • Glass art society


studio, glass, modern, glass, artistic, medium, produce, sculptures, three, dimensional, artworks, glass, objects, created, intended, make, sculptural, decorative, statement, though, usage, varies, term, properly, restricted, glass, made, small, workshops, typ. Studio glass is the modern use of glass as an artistic medium to produce sculptures or three dimensional artworks The glass objects created are intended to make a sculptural or decorative statement Though usage varies the term is properly restricted to glass made as art in small workshops typically with the personal involvement of the artist who designed the piece This is in contrast to art glass made by craftsmen in factories and glass art covering the whole range of glass with artistic interest made throughout history Both art glass and studio glass originate in the 19th century and the terms compare with studio pottery and art pottery but in glass the term studio glass is mostly used for work made in the period beginning in the 1960s with a major revival in interest in artistic glassmaking Handmade studio glass using complex techniques to achieve highly detailed patterns through murrine or caneworking by American artist David Patchen Pieces are often unique or made in a small limited edition Their prices may range from a few hundred to hundreds of thousands of dollars US 1 For the largest installations the prices are in the millions 2 Modern glass studios use a great variety of techniques in creating glass artworks including Glassblowing Flameworking Glass casting Coldworking Glass fusing Pate de verre Stained glass Contents 1 History 1 1 Techniques used in modern studios 2 The studio glass movement 3 Modern regional glass art 3 1 Australia 3 2 Belgium 3 3 China 3 4 Italy 3 5 Japan 3 6 Mexico 3 7 The Netherlands 3 8 United Kingdom 3 9 United States 3 9 1 The American Studio Glass Movement 3 9 2 American Glass Schools and Studios 4 Techniques and processes 4 1 Stained glass 4 2 Blown glass 4 3 Lampworking 4 4 Kiln formed glass 4 5 Cold glass 4 5 1 Sandblasting 4 6 Copperfoil technique 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 Sources 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory EditMain article Glass art From the 19th century various types of fancy glass started to become significant branches of the decorative arts Cameo glass was revived for the first time since the Romans initially mostly used for pieces in a neo classical style The Art Nouveau movement in particular made great use of glass with Rene Lalique Emile Galle and Daum of Nancy important names in the first French wave of the movement producing colored vases and similar pieces often in cameo glass and also using lustre techniques Louis Comfort Tiffany in America specialized in secular stained glass mostly of plant subjects both in panels and his famous lamps From the 20th century some glass artists began to class themselves as sculptors working in glass and as part of the fine arts In the early 20th century most glass production happened in factories Even individual glassblowers making their own personalized designs would do their work in those large shared buildings The idea of art glass grew small decorative works in small production runs often with designs or objects inside By the 1970s there were good designs for smaller furnaces and in the United States this gave rise to the studio glass movement of glassblowers who worked outside of factories often in their own buildings or studios This coincided with a move towards smaller production runs of particular styles This movement spread to other parts of the world as well Paperweight with items inside the glass Corning Museum of Glass Techniques used in modern studios Edit Modern glass studios use a great variety of techniques in creating their pieces The ancient technique of blown glass where a glassblower works at a furnace full of molten glass using metal rods and hand tools to blow and shape almost any form of glass is one of the more popular ways to work Most large hollow pieces are made this way and it allows the artist to be improvisational as they create their work A vase being created at the Reijmyre glassworks Sweden Another type is flame worked glass which uses torches and kilns in its production The artist generally works at a bench using rods and tubes of glass shaping with hand tools to create their work Many forms can be achieved this way with little investment into money and space Though the artist is somewhat limited in the size of the work that can be created a great level of detail can be achieved with this technique The paperweights by Paul Stankard are good examples of what can be achieved with flame working techniques In the 21st century flame worked glass became commonly used as adornments on functional items The glass conductor s baton commissioned by Chandler Bridges for Dr Andre Thomas is a clear example of flame working being used to transform a traditional item into an artistic statement Cast glass can be done at the furnace at the torch or in a kiln Generally the artist makes a mold out of refractory sand or plaster and silica which can be filled with either clear glass or colored or patterned glass depending on the techniques and effects desired Large scale sculpture is usually created this way Slumped glass and fused glass is similar to cast glass but it is not done at as high of a temperature Usually the glass is only heated enough to impress a shape or a texture onto the piece or to stick several pieces of glass together without a glue The traditional technique of stained glass is still employed for the creation of studio glass The artist cuts the glass into shapes and sets the pieces into lead cames which are soldered together They artist can also use hot techniques in a kiln to create texture patterns or change the overall shape of the glass Etched glass is created by dipping glass that has an acid resistant pattern applied to its surface into an acid solution Also an artist can engrave it by hand using wheels Sandblasting can create a similar effect Cold glass is any glass worked without the use of heat Glass may be cut chiseled sandblasted and glued or bonded to form art objects ranging from small pieces to monumental sculpture more details below The studio glass movement EditThe international studio glass movement originated in America spreading to Europe the United Kingdom Australia and Asia The emphasis of this movement was on the artist as the designer and maker of one of a kind objects in a small studio environment This movement enabled the sharing of technical knowledge and ideas among artists and designers that in industry would not be possible 3 With the dominance of Modernism in the arts there was a broadening of artistic media throughout the 20th century Indeed glass was part of the curriculum at art schools such as the Bauhaus Frank Lloyd Wright produced glass windows considered by some as masterpieces not only of design but of painterly composition as well During the 1950s studio ceramics and other craft media in the U S began to gain in popularity and importance and American artists interested in glass looked for new paths outside industry 3 Harvey Littleton often referred to as the Father of the Studio Glass Movement 4 was inspired to develop studio glassblowing in America by the great glass being designed and made in Italy Sweden and many other places and by the pioneering work in ceramics of the California potter Peter Voulkos Harvey Littleton and Dominick Labino held the now famous glass workshop at the Toledo Museum of Art in 1962 The goal was to melt glass in a small furnace so individual artists could use glass as an art medium in a non industrial setting This was the workshop that would stimulate the studio glass movement that spread around the world Instead of the large industrial settings of the past a glass artist could now work with a small glass furnace in an individual setting and produce art from glass Modern regional glass art EditAustralia Edit The early glass movement studio glass in Australia was spurred on by a visit to Australia by American artist Bill Boysen who toured the country in the early seventies with a mobile studio Boysen traveled to Australia in 1974 where he promoted glass artistry by presenting a revolutionary demonstration of glass blowing 5 to a gathering of around 250 attendees Boysen s mobile studio successfully toured eight eastern states venues in 74 thus greatly enhancing the credibility of hand crafted glass 6 Boysen s visit is credited with helping inspire a generation of Australian artists to work with glass and eventually led to the creation of the national glass art collection 5 in Wagga Wagga Australia This important collection includes over 450 works of art and is the most comprehensive public collection of Australian studio glass anywhere 5 Since that time Australian glass has gained worldwide recognition with Adelaide in South Australia hosting the International Glass Art Society Conference in 2005 on only its third occasion outside of the U S The Ranamok Glass Prize presented every year from 1994 to 2014 promotes contemporary glass artists living in Australia and New Zealand 7 Belgium Edit Daniel Theys en Chris Miseur from the glass factory Theys amp Miseur in Kortrijk Dutsel nl Belgium which represent Belgian artistic glass work concerning the entire world In 2015 John Moran co founded Gent Glas a public glass studio focused on introducing glass as an artistic medium to the general public The studio has gone on to invite over 40 visiting artists from 13 different countries China Edit In China glass art first appeared in the Western Zhou period 1046 771 BC and was called liuli One of the oldest artifacts of Chinese liuli a pair of burial ear cups was retrieved from the archaeological site of Western Han Dynasty Prince Liu Sheng of Zhongshan in Hebei Province Across thousands of years the art gradually diminished until it was resurrected by artists Loretta H Yang and Chang Yi in 1987 through the first contemporary Chinese liuli art studio Liuligongfang In 1997 Yang and Chang released their technique and procedure to the public with the purpose of creating a diplomatic platform for education and advancement The Liuligongfang technique has since become a key cornerstone upon which contemporary Chinese liuli is built with Yang and Chang widely recognized as the pioneers and founders of contemporary Chinese liuli citation needed Italy Edit Nuptial bowl by Angelo Barovier Murano Glass Museum Glass blowing began in the Roman Empire and Italy has refined the techniques of glass blowing ever since Until the very recent explosion of glass shops in Seattle US there were more on the Island of Murano Italy than anywhere else in world The majority of the refined artistic techniques of glassblowing e g incalmo reticello zanfirico latticino were developed there Moreover generations of blowers passed on their techniques to family members Boys would begin working at the fornace actually furnace called the factory in English Japan Edit Japanese glass art which was inspired by the studio glass movement of the 1960s has a short history The first independent glass studios of this period were built by Saburo Funakoshi and Makoto Ito and Shinzo Kotani in separate places Yoshihiko Takahashi and Hiroshi Yamano show their works at galleries throughout the world and are arguably Japan s glass artists of note Yoichi Ohira has worked with great success in Murano with Italian gaffers The small Pacific island Niijima administered by Tokyo has a renowned glass art center built and run by Osamu and Yumiko Noda graduates of Illinois State University where they studied with Joel Philip Myers Every autumn the Niijima International Glass Art Festival takes place inviting top international glass artists for demonstrations and seminars Emerging glass artists such as Yukako Kojima and Tomoe Shizumu were featured at the 2007 Glass Art Society exhibition space at the Pittsburgh Glass Center Toshichi Iwata and Kyohei Fujita were noteworthy Japanese studio glass artists who worked before and after the studio glass movement of the 1960s Both were active studio glass artists by the late 1940s Fujita got his start working in the production part of Toshichi Iwata s studio which was founded in 1947 See alsoSatsuma Kiriko cut glassMexico Edit Mexico was the first country in Latin America to have a glass factory in the early sixteenth century brought by the Spanish conquerors Although traditional glass in Mexico has prevailed over modern glass art since the 1970s there have been a List of glass artists Mexico that have given a place to that country in international glass art The Netherlands Edit Glass art in the Netherlands is mainly stimulated by the glass designing and glass blowing factory Royal Leerdam Crystal Such notable designers as H P Berlage Andries Copier and Sybren Valkema Willem Heesen Master Glassblower as well had a major influence on Dutch glass art Later the studio glass movement inspired by the American Harvey Littleton and the new Workgroup Glass founded by Sybren Valkema at the Gerrit Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam led to a new generation of glass artists United Kingdom Edit Wind Song Glass Peter Newsome Notable centres of glass production in the UK have been St Helens in Merseyside the home of Pilkington Glass and the site on which lead crystal glass was first produced by George Ravenscroft Stourbridge in the Midlands and Sunderland in the North East Sunderland is now home to the National Glass Centre which houses a specialist glass art course St Helens boasts a similar establishment but without the educational body attached Perthshire in Scotland was known internationally for its glass paperweights It has always hosted the best glass artists working on small scales but closed its factory in Crieff Scotland in January 2002 Glass artists in the UK have a variety of exhibitions The Scottish Glass Society hosts a yearly exhibition for members the Guild of Glass Engravers exhibit every two years and the British Glass Biennale begun in 2004 is now opening its third show British Glass Art owes much to the long history of craft The majority of its glass blowers who operate small studio furnaces produce aesthetically beautiful though primarily functional objects Technical skill as a blower is given as much importance as the artistic intent Other notable Glasshouse artists are Steven Newell Catherine Hough Annette Meech and of course Simon Moore There are a growing number of glass studios in the UK Many specialize in production glassware while others concentrate on one off or limited edition pieces An Arts Council funded non profit making organisation the Contemporary Glass Society founded in 1976 as British Artists in Glass exists to promote and support the work of glass artists in the UK 8 Other glass organisations in the UK are The Guild of Glass Engravers the Scottish Glass Society and Cohesion Cohesion is a different sort of entity to the other organisations in that it was specifically founded to promote and develop glass art as a commercial concern It organises trade events in and around the UK and at the international level Originally it focused only on artists based the north east of England but has since expanded its remit to cover the whole of the UK The Northlands Glass School was established in late 1990s in the far north of Scotland and offers residencies and masterclasses to arts students and established glass artists In November 2007 the glass sculpture Model for a Hotel was unveiled as an exhibit on the fourth plinth of Trafalgar Square London United States Edit The United States has had two phases of development in glass The first in the early and mid 1900s started in the cities of Toledo Ohio and Corning New York where factories such as Fenton and Steuben were making both functional and artistic glass pieces Toledo s rich history in glass goes back to the turn of the century when Libbey Glass Owens Illinois and Johns Manville led the world in the manufacturing of glass products Their reputations earned Toledo the title of the Glass Capital of the World These industry leaders along with the Toledo Museum of Art sponsored the first glass workshop in 1961 This workshop would lead to a new movement in American studio glass Glass sculpture by Dale Chihuly at a 2005 exhibition in Kew Gardens London England The piece is 13 feet 4 m high The American Studio Glass Movement Edit The second and most prominent phase in American glass began in 1962 when then ceramics professor Harvey Littleton and chemist Dominick Labino began the contemporary glassblowing movement The impetus for the movement consisted of their two workshops at the Toledo Museum of Art during which they began experimenting with melting glass in a small furnace and creating blown glass art Littleton and Labino were the first to make molten glass feasible for artists in private studios Harvey Littleton extended his influence through his own important artistic contributions and through his teaching and training including many of the most important contemporary glass artists including Marvin Lipofsky Sam Herman Britain Fritz Dreisbach and Dale Chihuly In 1964 Tom McGlauchlin started one of the first accredited glass programs at the University of Iowa and Marvin Lipofsky founded the university level glass program at the University of California at Berkeley In 1964 Dr Robert C Fritz founded a university level glass program at San Jose State University in San Jose California As a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin Madison under Harvey Littleton Bill H Boysen built the first glass studio at Penland School of Crafts in Penland North Carolina in 1965 After graduating in 1966 he started the graduate glass program at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale Illinois Dale Chihuly initiated the glass program at the Rhode Island School of Design in 1969 Tom McGlauchlin joined the Toledo Museum of Art as Professor and Director of Glass in conjunction with the University of Toledo s Art program in 1971 American Glass Schools and Studios Edit Glass studio in Brooklyn New York in 2018 Glass sculpture by David Patchen from a show in San Francisco The piece is 30 x 11 x 3 and comprises hundreds of murrine patterned tiles of glass and zanfirico cane rods of woven colors The growth of studio glass led to the formation of glass schools and art studios located across the country The largest concentrations of glass artists are located in Seattle Ohio New York Pennsylvania and New Jersey San Francisco Bay Area Los Angeles Orange County and Corning New York also have sizable concentrations of artists working in glass The Pilchuck Glass School near Seattle has become a mecca for glass artists from all over the world Those who attend Pilchuck either college students or established artists have the opportunity to attend master classes and exchange skills and information in an environment dedicated solely to glass based arts Pittsburgh Glass Center in Pittsburgh has residency programs for artists working in glass as well as a facility for artists to make use of for their works Pittsburgh Glass Center offers classes to the public on glassblowing and many other forms of glass art Philadelphia hosts a small array of glass studios for artists that use glass Home to the National Liberty Museum featuring all exhibits by international glass artists Philadelphia hosts the non profit P I P E program with residencies for artists that use glass as well as metal electroforming on glass and bronze casting The state of Pennsylvania has a long tradition of the production of industrial glass and its influence has quickly been absorbed by artists working in glass The Studio of The Corning Museum of Glass 9 established in 1996 is an internationally renowned teaching facility in Corning NY Classes and workshops are held for new and experienced glassworkers and artists The Studio s residency program brings artists from around the world to Corning for a month to work in The Studio facilities where they can explore and develop new glassblowing techniques or expand on their current bodies of work recipients of the Specialty Glass Residency include Beth Lipman Mark Peiser Karen LaMonte and Anna Mlasowsky 10 Artists working in The Studio have access to the collections of The Corning Museum of Glass and benefit from the resources of the Rakow Research Library 11 whose holdings cover the art and history of glass and glassmaking Wheaton Arts and Cultural Center 12 located in the historic glass industry capital of Millville New Jersey is a nonprofit art and history education center that is home to the Museum of American Glass which houses the largest collection of American glass objects in the world The collection includes historical glass as well as contemporary work from some of the glass world s biggest names In addition to the museum WheatonArts operates a world class glass studio under the creative direction of Hank Murta Adams 13 The Creative Glass Center of America 14 which is funded by WheatonArts and crucial to its mission of continuing Millville s legacy in the glass world hosts a fellowship program exclusively for up and coming and mid career artists working in glass Well known alumnae of the CGCA fellowship include Steve Tobin 1983 Kait Rhoads 1997 and 2008 Lino Tagliapietra 1989 Beth Lipman 2001 Gregory Nangle 2006 Deborah Czeresko 2006 and 2010 Angus Powers 2003 and Stephen Paul Day 1992 1997 2004 and 2009 15 San Jose State University glass program was started by Dr Robert Fritz in 1964 and is the oldest educational studio glass program in California Dr Fritz died suddenly in 1986 and Mary B White ran the program from 1986 2005 Techniques and processes EditStained glass Edit Main article Stained glass Stained glass such as the windows that are seen in churches are windows that contain an element of painting in them The window is designed After the glass has been cut to shape paint that contains ground glass is applied so that when it is fired in a kiln the paint fuses onto the glass surface Following this process the sections of glass are placed together and held in place with lead came that is then soldered at the joints Leadlights and stained glass are manufactured in the same way but leadlights do not contain any sections of glass that have been painted 13th century stained glass windows in Sainte Chapelle Paris Modern stained glass church window by Sarah Bristow Leadlight artwork from 1977Blown glass Edit Glassblowing is one of the most used technique for creating art glass and is still favoured by most of today s studio glass artists This is because of the artist s intimacy with the material and an almost infinite opportunity for creativity and variation at almost every stage of the process Glassblowing can be used to create a multitude of shapes and can incorporate color through a wide range of techniques Coloured glass can be gathered out of a crucible clear glass can be rolled in powdered colored glass to coat the outside of a bubble it can be rolled in chips of glass it can be stretched into rods and incorporated through caneworking or it can be layered cut and fused into tiles and incorporated into a bubble of glass for intricate patterns through murrine Blown glass refers only to individually hand made items but can include the use of moulds for shaping ribbing and spiking to produce decorative bubbles Glass blown articles must be made of compatible glass or the stress in the piece will cause a failure Mid 20th Century Vortex Vase by Robert C Fritz one of the founding fathers of the 1960s studio glass movement Macro detail from a glass bowl blown at the World of Glass Museum The white swirl was made by rolling the hot glass in glass powder Lampworking Edit Similar to glassblowing Lampworking also called flameworking or torchworking is a style in which the artist manipulates glass with the use of a torch rather than a blowpipe or blow tube on a smaller scale Once in a molten state the glass is formed by blowing and shaping with tools and hand movements Though typical lampworking art takes the form of beads figurines marbles small vessels Christmas tree ornaments and other such things it is also used to create scientific instruments as well as glass models of animals and botanical subjects A lampworked glass model of a cactus part of Leopold and Rudolf Blaschka s Glass Flowers collection at the Harvard Museum of Natural History A sample of the Blaschka invertebrate models Lampwork glass beads unknown artistKiln formed glass Edit Further information Warm glass Kiln formed glass is usually referred to as warm glass and can be either made up from a single piece of glass that is slumped into or over a mould or different colours and sheets of glass fused together The process of hot glass is highly scientific in that the types of glass and temperatures that they must be fired at is quite complicated operation to undertake correctly Art glass that is kiln formed usually take the form of dishes plates or tiles Glass that is fused in a kiln must be of the same co efficient of expansion CoE If glass that does not have the same CoE is used for fusing the differing rates of contraction will cause minute stress fractures to form and over time these fractures will cause a piece to crack The use of polarizing filters to inspect the work will determine if stress fractures are present Cold glass Edit Cold glass is worked by any method that does not use heat Processes include sandblasting cutting sawing chiseling bonding and gluing Sandblasting Edit Glass can be decorated by sandblasting the surface of a piece in order to remove a layer of glass thereby making a design stand out Items that are sandblasted are usually thick slabs of glass into which a design has been carved by means of high pressure sandblasting This technique provides a three dimensional effect but is not suitable for toughened glass as the process could shatter it Sandblasted design in a window Sculpture of an apple made of sandblasted glass The interior of this artwork was sandblasted Copperfoil technique Edit The technique of using copperfoil is mainly used in the construction of smaller pieces such as Tiffany style lamps and it was in fact frequently used by Louis Comfort Tiffany It consists of wrapping cut sections of glass in a self adhesive tape that is made out of thin copper foil This technique requires a great deal of dexterity and is also very time consuming After the sections have been foiled they are soldered together in order to form the item Tiffany copper foil lamp Pieces of glass are wrapped in copper tape and then soldered Gallery Edit Macro detail from a glass bowl blown at The World of Glass Museum incorporating the Pilkington Glass Museum St Helens UK Glass ball made by Tyler Hopkins at the Verrerie of Brehat in Brittany Hand made crystal fish by Lennart Nissmark of Studio Glashyttan in Ahus Sweden Reclining Dress Impression with Drapery a life sized glass sculpture by Karen LaMonte The House That Will Not Pass for Any Color Than its Own 2011 shown here in 2020 installed at Battery Park City NYCSee also EditCameo glass Caneworking Flameworking Fused glass Glass Art Glass beadmaking Glass casting Glass disease Glass museums and galleries Glass tiles Glassblowing Glossary of Glass Art terms Knitted Glass Lampworking Mosaic Murano glass Murrine Paperweights Val Saint Lambert Vitreography art form List of glass artistsSources EditThe End William Warmus Glass Magazine Autumn 1995 Warmus William 2003 Fire and form the art of contemporary glass West Palm Beach Fla Seattle WA Norton Museum of Art Distributed by University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 943411 39 2 OCLC 52149531 Contains a detailed Chronological Bibliography of Contemporary Glass compiled with assistance of Beth Hylen Lynn Martha 2004 American studio glass 1960 1990 New York Hudson Hills Press ISBN 978 1 55595 239 6 OCLC 53939804 Oldknow Tina 2020 Venice and American studio glass Milano Skira ISBN 978 88 572 4387 0 OCLC 1200593335 References Edit Bonhams 20th Century Decorative Arts www bonhams com Retrieved 2017 09 23 artnet com Magazine Features Art Market Guide 2003 www artnet com Retrieved 2017 09 23 a b Corning Museum of Glass Archived from the original on 2008 01 12 Retrieved 2007 10 14 Harvey K Littleton Smithsonian American Art Museum Retrieved 26 September 2010 a b c Blow in Bill leaves locals glassy eyed Weekly Times Australia 31 August 2005 95 Skillitzi Stephen 16 January 2009 Australian Glass Pioneers Glass Central Canberra Retrieved 27 February 2013 News Kathryn Wightman wins the 2014 and final Ranamok Glass Prize Bullseye Gallery Bullseye Gallery 12 August 2014 Archived from the original on 22 October 2014 Retrieved 22 October 2014 The Contemporary Glass Society The Studio cmog org Specialty Glass Residency Corning Museum of Glass www cmog org Retrieved 2020 02 24 Rakow Research Library cmog org WheatonArts Explore Experience Discover Wheaton Arts and Cultural Center WheatonArts Hank Murta Adams Archived from the original on 2013 05 12 Retrieved 2013 01 05 WheatonArts Creative Glass Center of America Archived from the original on 2013 01 14 Retrieved 2013 01 05 Past Fellows Wheaton Arts and Cultural Center WheatonArts Retrieved 21 August 2014 Further reading EditStudio glass in The Metropolitan Museum of Art New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art 1996 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Glass art Glasstress Contemporary artists and glass at the Biennale of Venice Glass art society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Studio glass amp oldid 1106973656, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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