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Boathouse
April Surgent, Boathouse, 2014. Fused glass, cameo-carved.

Tuesday March 22, 2016 | by managingeditor@glassquarterly.com

OPENING: To celebrate 10th anniversary of the TMA Glass Pavilion, a survey show

To celebrate that 10th year since its Glass Pavilion opened, the Toledo Museum of Art will survey Studio Glass with a new exhibit opening in April. "Hot Spot: Contemporary Glass from Private Collections" will be on view in the exhibition gallery of the Glass Pavilion from April 15th through September 18th, 2016, and will feature work from North American, Asian, Australian, and European artists. Since it opened in 2006, the 74,000-square-foot Glass Pavilion has housed not only glass exhibitions, but artist studios, demonstration areas, and special museum events. The new building across the street from the historic art museum was ground-breaking in its use of glass not only for exterior walls, but for interior walls as well. Designed by the Pritzker-Prize winning architecture firm of SANAA, Ltd., the unique structure was chosen for its light imprint on the park it occupies, as well as an architectural marvel that celebrates a material so connected to the institution founded in 1901 by industrial glass magnate Edward Drummond Libbey, whose Libbey corporation continues to operate in the city of Toledo.

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Agood Spirit 29X6 5X5In 2016
Preston Singletary, Journey Across the Fire, 2016. H 28 in. courtesy: traver gallery

Monday March 21, 2016 | by Andrew Page

OPENING: Preston Singletary to debut new work at “Journey across the fire” exhibition

Opening April 7th, and running through the end of the month at Traver Gallery in Seattle, a new exhibition by Preston Singletary will unveil new forms that marry traditional Northwest Coast Native American imagery with new glass shapes. Entited "Journey Through the Fire (and in to the World)," the exhibition's work employs Modernist vessel forms as three-dimensional canvases for the artist's ongoing study of Native American iconography — specifically Tlingit Formline art. 

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Tuesday March 15, 2016 | by Andrew Page

OPENING: Corning to exhibit the lesser-known invertebrate sculptures by the Blaschkas

The father-and-son team of Leopold and Rudolf Blaschka, famous for their lampworked glass flowers that make up the Ware Collection at Harvard, were better known in their day for their models of sea creatures. While their flowers are what gives them the most contemporary attention, such as the recent "Lifeforms" exhibition of realistic work at Pittsburgh Glass Center in which the German model-makers are cited as inspiration for a juried show, a new exhibition opening in May at The Corning Museum of Glass will put the focus on their models of sea creatures. More than 70 Blaschka invertebrate sea creatures, drawn mostly from the collection of the Cornell University Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, will be on view, as well as numerous drawings and instruments used to craft these finely detailed objects.

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Thursday March 10, 2016 | by Andrew Page

Silvia Levenson solo show opens at the Murano Glass Museum in Venice

Argentinian-born artist Silvia Levenson's traveling exhibition "Identidad Desaparecidos ('Missing Identity' in English)" has been on view in Buenos Aires, Spain, France, Latvia, and at the Katzen Center at American University in the Washington D.C. area. An examination of the lingering trauma experienced by Argentine society under brutal dictatorship that Levenson and her young family fled will open in her adopted country of Italy on March 12th (Levenson has been living here since 1980). On Saturday, the Murano Glass Museum will open Levenson's first solo  exhibition in Venice, and it will include a unique site-specific work that will circle the gallery area with 119 kiln-cast baby clothes represting the number of the children taken from their mothers who, thanks to the ongoing efforts of the "Grandmothers of the Plaza de Mayo" have been able to learn their biological identity through DNA testing.

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Sunday March 6, 2016 | by Andrew Page

International Flameworking Conference to feature Eusheen Goines

FILED UNDER: Announcements, Events
Eusheen Goines, the headline artist at the 16th annual International Flameworking Conference, has adapted furnace glassblowing techinques, such as canework and gathering molten glass, to use at the torch, taking borosilicate glass into new terrain. He's also known for working with marble-makers as well as his own approach to intense patterning. The featured artist at the conference that will run March 18th through 20th at Salem Community College in Carney's Point, New Jersey, Goines is representative of the rich cross-fertilization the borosilicate world is experiencing as innovation and collaboration have expanded the range of expression in functional and nonfunctional works to realize larger and more complex and richly adorned objects. Credit technical advances in borosilicate as well as the destigmification of pipe-making as marijuana laws are rapidly liberalizing around the U.S.

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Sunday February 21, 2016 | by Andrew Page

Hot Off the Presses: GLASS #142, Spring 2016

The Spring 2016 edition of GLASS: The UrbanGlass Art Quarterly (#142) is hitting newsstands and subscriber mailboxes at a moment when virtual reality is poised to go mainstream. Devices that turn your cell phone into a headset are already shipping to curious consumers, the Sundance Film Festival highlighted interactive experiences in an exhbition called "New Frontiers," and even an organization as august as The New York Times has been releasing online reports designed to envelop users in a digital experience. More complex headsets and interactive accessories are getting ready to ship. All of the buzz about virtual reality inspired us to remind the world of the rich terrain already mined by visual artists, who've used installations, architecture, and sculpture that create new realities through repeat reflectivity, partially mirrored glass surfaces, and cultivated perceptual shifts that play with optics to alter our relationship to the world around us, and force us to reconsider our place in it.

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Thursday February 18, 2016 | by Andrew Page

The Corning Museum of Glass appoints Susie Silbert curator of modern and contemporary glass

FILED UNDER: Announcements, Museums, News
When curator, author, and frequent lecturer Tina Oldknow retired in September 2015, the glass world was rife with speculation about who the museum might tap to fill her outsized shoes. Today, The Corning Museum announced that it has selected independent curator and writer Susie Silbert to succeed Oldknow as Curator of Modern and Contemporary Glass. Silbert (who has contributed to GLASS: The UrbanGlass Art Quarterly) "will be responsible for the acquisition, exhibition, cataloguing, and research of the Museum’s modern and contemporary collection," which the museum identifies as the period that starts in 1900 and runs to the present day. In her new role, Silbert will oversee the exhibitions and programming of the 26,000-square-foot Contemporary Art + Design Galleries, which opened in March 2015 to great fanfare. 

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Clayman
"Circular Object One" by Daniel Clayman, 2003

Tuesday February 9, 2016 | by managingeditor@glassquarterly.com

The Studio at Corning celebrates its 20th birthday, announces 2016 residencies

FILED UNDER: Announcements, Education
This May, The Studio at The Corning Museum of Glass (CMoG) will celebrate its 20th birthday.  Founded in 1996, The Studio plans to highlight the milestone with a slate of special events including an exhibition, an online commemoration, and an open house.  Entitled "Celebrating 20 Years of The Studio," a special exhibition will take place on the West Bridge of the museum, and will feature the work of artists who have taught classes or held a residency at the Studio over the past two decades. Meanwhile, inside The Studio, a display will showcase work created by artists who taught at the first-ever summer session in 1996. The celebration will culminate in an open house on May 26, featuring a giant glass cupcake create by John Miller. CMoG’s 2300° live glass blowing event and the ribbon cutting for the seventh annual GlassFest will also mark the anniversary.

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Sunday February 7, 2016 | by Andrew Page

In Memoriam: Jim Norton (1957 - 2016)

James "Jim" Norton, who died unexpectedly on January 28, 2016, at the age of 58, was born and raised in Calgary, Alberta, where he studied art and glassblowing, and where he built his career as a glassblower and educator. After studying at the Alberta College of Art + Design (ACAD) in Calgary, and the Pilchuk Glass School in Stanwood, Washington, he worked as a glassblowing instructor at ACAD ifrom 1986 until 2014. Norton also led summer workshops at Red Deer College from 1986 until 2005. When not teaching, he could usually be found working in the studio. He assisted in developing Skookum Glass in the 1980s, and opened the Double Struggle Studio in 1985 with Marty Kaufman and continued running the studio with Barry Fairbairn.

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Tuesday February 2, 2016 | by Andrew Page

Michael Glancy to speak at meeting of New York glass collectors

FILED UNDER: Announcements, Events, News
For its first meeting of 2016, the recently renamed Art Glass Forum will host artist Michael Glancy, who will deliver a talk about his work which references natural environments at micro and macro scale. With titles draw from the natural sciences, Glancy's glass works are intensively coldworked — sandblasted, cut with acid, and then selectively electroplated with metals. The results resemble magnified ceullar landscapes, or possibly geological formations, which exhibit convincing organic contours.

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Glass: The UrbanGlass Quarterly, a glossy art magazine published four times a year by UrbanGlass has provided a critical context to the most important artwork being done in the medium of glass for more than 40 years.