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Flying Through Glass Dale Chihuly
Dale Chihuly was born in Tacoma, Washington. He was first introduced to glass
while studying interior design at the University of Washington. After
graduating, he enrolled in the first glass program in the county, at the
University of Washington. Chihuly was awarded the Fulbright Fellowship to work
at the Venini factory in Venice, Italy. In 1971, Dale co-founded Pilchuck Glass
School in Washington.
Richard LaLonde is a pioneer in the fused glass movement and continues his innovative work in the mural and vessel forms.
Chihuly Garden and Glass
Dale Chihuly (1941-present)
Dale Chihuly, born on September 20, 1941, is an American glass sculptor. He studied art at a variety of universities around the country, and later studied glass in Venice, which inspired him to open the Pilchuck Glass School. In 1976, Chihuly was involved in a car accident, permanently blinding him in his left eye. He could no longer blow glass, but instead, hired others to do it for him while he directed. The use of colors, shapes, and designs in Chihuly's work was what initially captivated me.
Chihuly Garden and Glass is now open at Seattle Center!
WHAT IS IT?
This is a new addition to the Seattle Center campus. The old Fun Forest had become run down and the City of Seattle was looking for a replacement for the 1.5 acre site adjacent to the Space Needle to highlight the 50th anniversary of the 1962 World’s Fair.
Dale Chihuly , Seattle Center, and the Space Needle worked out an arrangement to build a permanent exhibition dedicated to the life’s work of Seattle’s famous glass artist. The Chihuly Garden and Glass (“CGG”) was approved and it was to be owned and operated by the Space Needle.
BACKGROUND
Detail from the Mille Fiori Installation
Detail from a Chandelier
Glass makers, aspiring artists and people who love the art from all corners
of the globe will be joined at the Glass Furnace by world famous glass artist
Dante Marioni and Seattle glass artist Janusz Pozniak, who will assist
Tagliapietra in his demonstrations.
Known as the pioneer of contemporary glass art, Tagliapietra is also
acknowledged as the person who introduced the art form to the U.S. The maestro
will stage a new feat at the Glass Furnace during his April 21-27
appearance.
Tagliapietra will create unique works of art by using the same form but
different design, pushing the boundaries of glass with his assistants in a
historic week that will inspire all spectators. We will share with you photos of
the works and details of 12 fascinating shows after the event.
Contact with Cam Ocağı Vakfı , not to miss this impressive event...
HOURS
*Last ticket sold one hour prior to the above closing time.
Thursday, July 26: The Glasshouse and Garden Plaza will be closed for a private event from 3 - 11pm. The Exhibition Hall and Garden will remain open.
Save Time. Buy online.
Chihuly Garden and Glass is a long-term Exhibition that will be viewable for an extended period of time. Advance tickets may be purchased online or at the door now through September 3, 2012. After Labor Day, tickets will be available online and at the door up to 30 days in advance. Click “Buy Now” to view date and time options.
Having trouble purchasing tickets? Please contact online Ticketing Technical Support: 40
Private Event
Glass Artist: Dale Chihuly
Our Cincinnati Art Museum is fortunate enough to have a Chihuly chandalier (featured above). Dale Chihuly is known for his exquisite glass work. Please visit his site when you have some time to spend. It is exquisite.
Six years ago, I heard about Chihuly online from some friends and looked up his work. Then that weekend, I discovered in the newspaper that a Chihuly exhibition was coming to Dayton, Ohio (just up the road from us) that week. I love those serendipitous coincidences. I threw the kids in the car and we had one of the most delightful afternoons of art appreciation ever. The kids are hopeless when it comes to Chihuly, swearing he is the most visually stimulating and engaging artist they’ve experienced. If you need a way to jumpstart interest in art, glass exhibitions are truly a marvel. Chihuly is the best. You can often find his works in wonderful documentary form on DVDs in libraries too
Lest you think I had no fun this summer: In July my family (husband Jim and our two sons, Evan and Ethan and I), went to see the spectacular exhibit of glass art by Dale Chihuly at the de Young Museum in San Francsco. I have long admired Chihuly's art, and this show was everything I had hoped it would be and more. The hand blown and individually shaped pieces of glass are brilliantly colored in solid, striped or mottled colors, and in such flowing shapes that they often look like living plant or animal forms. Indeed Chihuly plays with this life-form concept often, referring to images such as a primeval forest, an undersea kelp garden, or flowers one might find in a garden on the moon. At other times, he plays these flowing shapes against purely geometrical shapes such as spheres. The result is a sense of awe and wonder, moving from room to room like Alice moving through a looking-glass world.
The sheer scale of the pieces often stuns the viewer into little gasps of surprise. The giant marbles in one life-size boat, next to another boat brimming with a wild chaotic jumble of spires, spirals and ribbons of luminous glass, were hypnotizing.
Looking at these photos you might not guess that the "marbles" are several feet in diameter. Part of the fun of the exhibit was the way the glass was displayed, allowing it to be viewed from above, below, and alongside as the viewer passes by-- even through a room where the glass objects were viewed through a glass cieling. We also got to see several of the amazing hanging chandeliers that Chihuly is famous for, in saturated colors of red, yellow, blue and green.
There was also a tower of glass on display outside the exhibit, that can be viewed at night, lit up with spotlights. Our visit was during the day, so we missed the lighted tower. However we did drive a few short miles to the neighboring museum of the Legion of Honor, where a huge Chihuly work was on display in the courtyard: an image of the Sun, made of radiating spirals of yellow glass. We were there on a cloudy day, so the glass did not have the added benefit of sunlight for our viewing. Nevertheless it was impressive. I took a photograph with Jim, Evan and Ethan in front of it so as to get a sense of the scale of this work.
Dale Chihuly Glass Chandelier at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London
GLASS ARTISTS
Richard LaLonde is a pioneer in the fused glass
movement and continues his innovative work in the mural and vessel forms.
"Calla"
by Richard LaLonde
12"H x 17"W x 19"D
"Golden Lotus"
by Richard LaLonde
9"H x 19"W x 19"D
"Pink Lily"
by Richard LaLonde
fused and slumped glass
14"h X 19"w X 14"d
Ruth Brockmann's fused kiln slumped masks and
intricate sandcast sculptures defy the traditional concepts of glass art.
Detailed and colorful, the prevalent theme of her work is the interrelationship
of all living forms,
their spirits and vital connections to humans.
"Bluebird of Paradise"
by Ruth Brockmann
19"H x 19"W x
4"D
"Turtle Mama - Sacred Round"
by Ruth Brockmann
19"H x 17"W
x 5"D
"Shaman with Parrot"
by Ruth Brockmann
12"H x 12"W x
4"D
"Hummingbird Spirit"
Fused and Slumped Glass
by Ruth
Brockmann
20"H x 19"W x 4"D
"The Miraculous Cycle"
by Ruth Brockmann
18"H x 18"W x
5"D
"Flicker Mask"
by Ruth Brockmann
"Salmon Man"
Cast Glass on hand-forged metal stand
by Ruth
Brockmann
11"H x 20"W x 5"D
"Salmon Return"
Cast Glass on hand-forged metal stand
by
Ruth Brockmann
10"H x 21"W x 5"D
"Salmon Woman"
Cast Glass on hand-forged metal stand
by
Ruth Brockmann
11"H x 20"W x 5"D
by Ruth Brockmann
Henner Schroder illustrates his expertise with
two challenging glass techniques,
sandcasting and manipulated/rolled hot both of
which he was invited to teach again this past spring
at the world famous
Pilchuck Glass School in Washington.
Intrigued by images left by ancient
cultures,
Henner combines these in a challenging process of "layering" visual
information.
"The Things You Leave Behind"
28"h by 10"w by 12"d
by
Henner Schroder
Cast glass with glass inclusions on a steel and wood
holder
(may be hung on the wall or placed on a flat surface)
"Some Went Far"
104.5"H x 16"L x 8"W
by Henner Schroder
Sandcast glass with cast glass inclusions; constructed steel stand
"Dance of Life"
30.5"H x 38"L x 11"W
by Henner Schroder
Sandcast glass with cast glass inclusions; constructed steel stand
"Creepy Critters" (3 views)
19"H x 9"DIA
Cast
Glass rolled hot and manipulated; Steel Stand
by Henner Schroder
"Turtle Boat"
95.5"H x 16"L x 8"W
Cast Glass with
cast glass inclusions; Constructed Steel Frame
All the images inside the
casting are derived from petroglyphs from the Hawaiian Islands
by Henner
Schroder
"The Long Voyage Home"
11"H x 28"L x 10"W
by Henner
Schroder
Cast Glass with cast glass inclusions and solid worked onlay
(attached hot);
steel and wood (poplar and wenge) stand. (this piece can
also be displayed on the wall)
"Lakeside Duet"
22.5"H x 25.5"L x 7.5"W
by Henner
Schroder
Sandcast glass with cast glass inclusions; constructed steel
stand
"Hanging in the Balance"
28"H x 25"L x 8"W
by Henner
Schroder
Sandcast Glass with cast glass inclusion and solid worked onlay
attached hot;
constructed steel stand; antique plumbob
"Greeting the Dawn"
27.5"H x 11.5"L x 9"W
by Henner
Schroder
Cast Glass, manipulated hot; cast glass stand attached cold
"Hunters Flame"
29.5"H x 10" DIA
by Henner Schroder
Cast
Glass with cast Glass Inclusions, Manipulated Hot
"This Is The Way It Was"
70.5"H x 14"DIA
Cast glass rolled
and manipulated hot; constructed steel stand
Images from African and
Australian pictographs
by Henner Schroder
Jon Kuhn is regarded as one of the
leading glass artists in the world. With works featured in over 30 international
museums including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Carnegie Museum, White
House Permanent Collection, National Museum of American Art and hundreds of
private residences and public spaces, millions have enjoyed his beautiful
works.
"Aquanell"
10 1/2" H x 6 1/2" W x 6 1/2" D
by Jon Kuhn
"Promise"
9" H x 7 1/2" W x 7 1/2"D (4 1/2" cube)
by Jon
Kuhn
"Frozen Passage"
10 3/4" x 8 1/2" x 5 1/4"
No hole
circle on spinner
by Jon Kuhn
"Deep Imagination"
25" x 11" x 6
1/2"
Parallogram Prism on spinner
by Jon Kuhn
"Emerald Fusion"
16" x 10 22/32" x 5 20/32"
with frame 22
1/2" x 16 1/4"
Hanging wedge on stainless steel
by Jon Kuhn
"Desert
Trio"
by Cynthia Miller
13" x 18", transparent and opaque enamels mounted
on black lucite.
Hangs horizontally or vertically.
"Sunrise Over the Sea Quartet"
by Cynthia Miller
21" x 25",
Transparent & opaque enamels
& "jewels" kiln fired onto burnished
copper.
"Firey Duet"
by Cynthia Miller
12" x 15". Transparent
enamels and "jewels" on burnished copper.
"Autumn River Duet"
by Cynthia Miller
11" x 23",
Transparent and opaque enamels on burnished copper.
Cynthia Miller images that
can be brought to Gallery Mack for viewing.
"In A Blue Moon"
fused glass on copper squares
17 1/2"H by
18 1/2"W
by Marie Maretska
"Morning Glory"
textured panel measuring
18 3/4"H by 18
3/4"W
by Marie Maretska
"Armour II"
two panels 16" H by 27" W
by Marie
Maretska
"Seedling Series 1,2,3 and 4"
single panels, 14"h by 14"w
each
by Marie Maretska
"Seedling Series 1,2,3 and 4"
single panels, 14"h by 14"w
each
by Marie Maretska
"Seedling Series 1,2,3 and 4"
single panels, 14"h by 14"w
each
by Marie Maretska
"Seedling Series 1,2,3 and 4"
single panels, 14"h by 14"w
each
by Marie Maretska
Michael Bokrosh, III, has established
his reputation forging a new direction in the design of optical guality glass.
He has spent over 25 years working both in the European tradition (Brusnia
Stakla, Yugoslavia and Orrefors) and that of North America (Glass Eye Studio,
Seattle, WA). By combining old world designs and traditions with innovative
contemporary techniques the artist creates one-of-a-kind pieces of sculpted
glass.
"Golden Veil"
by Michael Bokrosh
"Star Pyramid"
by Michael Bokrosh
"Phantom Portal"
by Michael Bokrosh
"Diamond Portal" (two
views, color chages from viewing angle)
Carved optical glass on rock
28"H
x 7"D x 7"W
by Michael Bokrosh