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Thinking
in Glass
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EXHIBITION
JUROR: Beth Lipman. Ms Lipman is head of the
glass department at the Worcester Center for Crafts in Worcester,
MA. From 1997 - 2000 she served as the Education Director at Urban
Glass, Brooklyn, NY . She received her BFA from Tyler School of
Art, Temple University, in 1994, and in 2001 she was awarded a
fellowship to study at Wheaton Village Creative Glass Center of
America in Millville, NJ. Ms Lipman's work can be viewed at www.hellergallery.com.
From
the Guest Curator of Thinking in Glass
I am happy
to be co-curating Thinking in Glass which is coming to the CAA
gallery in October 2004. Glass is an exciting medium that has
a rich history.
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Lime
Green Mask, 2004, Sand Cast Glass
Hillary Faccio |
Glass is
made from sand melted at a high temperature with a flux such as
soda or lead
oxide. At
room temperature glass is not solid, it is in fact a super cooled
liquid which will flow continuously throughout its life. This
effect can be seen in old window where the panes distort over
time becoming thicker at the bottom. The exact origins of glass
are unknown but early artifacts point toward Mesopotamia circa
3000 BC. The earliest glass was used in place of gems for jewelry
and it was also used to make beads, mosaic tile, and of course
its most popular use was in making vessels or containers.
The methods
of working with glass have changed little over thousands of years.
What has changed is ideas about how to use glass. Today glass
is a viable art and craft medium. My interest in glass is purely
sculptural. Its properties are like no other material. It can
be made into an object that is light as a feather or heavy as
a cinder block; it can be transparent or opaque and it can be
smooth as silk or rough and even dangerously sharp. Glass also
has the ability to refract light.
The exhibition
Thinking in Glass will explore the various properties of glass
as well as different ways of expressing them. It is the curators’
hope that all forms of glass will be represented: glass blowing,
kiln casting, stained glass, flame working, painting on glass,
installation, video, as well as possibilities I haven't yet thought
of.
The exhibition runs from October 7 to November 7. There will also
be a gallery talk following the opening on October 16, 4:00 -
5:00 pm, where I will discuss sandcasting and my co-curator Lilianna
Glen will talk about flameworking.
Hillary Faccio
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