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Tuesday January 26, 2016 | by Andrew Page

Toots Zynsky chosen for next Specialty Glass Artist Residency at Corning

FILED UNDER: Announcements, Museums, News
The Corning Museum of Glass is expanding its Specialty Glass Artist-in-Residency program, a unique opportunity for artists to work with glass formerly available only to industry. Today, it was announced that artist Toots Zynsky has been awarded the first of these residencies for 2016. Zynsky will be only the third specialty glass resident, following the inaugural metal sculptor, Albert Paley from 2014-2015, and glass artist, Tom Patti in 2016. A joint project between the museum and Corning Incorporated, the program is expanding from one to two residents per year. Corning, which has developed and patented more than 150 specialty glass formulations, will provides access to its specialty glasses as well as technical support. The museum makes its Studio and collections available to residents.

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Friday January 22, 2016 | by Andrew Page

Glenn Adamson stepping down as director of the Museum of Arts and Design after brief tenure

FILED UNDER: Announcements, Museums, News
In a surprise announcement, the Museum of Arts and Design today made it official that Glenn Adamson, the Nanette L. Laitman Director of the museum since September 2013, will be stepping down from his position as of March 31, 2016. Adamson's tenure of two-and-a-half years is in sharp contrast to his immediate predecessor Holly Hotchner, who held the top position at the museum for 16 years, and the 24-year tenure of the museum's first director Paul J. Smith. Adamson, who wrote a sharp critique of MAD's new Columbus Circle museum building in a 2011 article in Art in America, was an unconventional choice to lead it. During his time at the museum, Adamson restructured the curatorial staff and broadened the focus of the museum to include "makers and making," even initiating a biennial celebration entitled "NYC Makers" in 2014 which included work by musicians and product designers alongside that of artists and traditional craftspeople.

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Tuesday January 19, 2016 | by Andrew Page

OPENING: Jeff Zimmerman takes on the temporal in latest gallery exhibition

Glassblower Jeff Zimmerman will showcase his recent explorations of water and time, ongoing themes in his career, at an opening this evening at R & Company, a design-art gallery in New York City's Tribeca neighborhood. In both functional and sculptural works, Zimmerman investigates natural processes -- a splash of water, the formation of ice crystals, the movement of ice floes.

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Saturday January 16, 2016 | by James Yood

In Memoriam: Marvin Lipofsky (1938 – 2016)

FILED UNDER: Announcements, In Memoriam
Renowned glass sculptor and a pioneer of Studio Glass, Marvin Lipofsky died at his home in Berkeley, California, in the early morning hours of Friday, January 15.  He was 77 years old. Lipofsky had been in declining health for the last few years, though visitors to SOFA Chicago this past November will remember his dynamic public presentation at a survey of his work at the booth of Duane Reed Gallery, and his pleasure in holding court on a bench in the art fair’s main aisle, greeting a seemingly endless stream of well-wishers and acquaintances. 

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Thursday January 14, 2016 | by Andrew Page

Seattle art patron Becky Benaroya gifts glass collection — and $14-million — to Tacoma Art Museum

The Tacoma Art Museum in Tacoma, Washington, has scored a coup as the recipient of a $14-million gift from Becky Benaroya, who, with her late husband, Jack, has been acknowledged as among the most generous and powerful Seattle art patrons. In the Benaroyas seven decades of marriage, they assembled a collection of 225 works of art, with an emphasis on Studio Glass and regional Northwest painters and sculptors. For Becky Benaroya's 93rd birthday, she has promised not only the Benaroya art collection, but nearly $14 million to pay for a new wing at the TAM to house it, as well as to finance the salary of a dedicated curator of the collection and its upkeep.

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Wednesday January 13, 2016 | by Andrew Page

Perry Price leaving American Craft Council to run the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft

FILED UNDER: Announcements, Education, News
After four years as director of education for the American Craft Council, Perry Price is departing from the Minneapolis-based non-profit to take over as executive director of the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft. In his new role running the 15-year-old nonprofit visual arts center with a mission of advancing "education about the process, product and history of craft," Price is charged with growing the Texas craft center into an organization with a national profile. He is slated to start in the new position on February 29, 2016.

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Tuesday January 12, 2016 | by Andrew Page

HELP WANTED: Toledo Museum of Art seeks paid glass curatorial intern

The Toledo Museum of Art in Toledo, Ohio, is looking for a curatorial intern, preferably someone currently a graduate student with a focus on museum studies or art history, for a paid position. The successful applicant will have an opportunity to work extensively with the museum's renowned collection of decorative and sculptural glass objects. The Hirsch Glass Curatorial Intership, as it is known, involves assistance with exhibition planning and organization, as well as opportunities for research and writing about the glass collection.

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Wednesday January 6, 2016 | by Andrew Page

OPENING: April Surgent exhibition debuts at the Museum of Northwest Art on Saturday

Opening January 9, 2016, April Surgent's exhibition at the Museum of Northwest Art entitled "Observations of Life on Ice" employs the age-old practice of cameo glass engraving to comment on and investigate very contemporary issues of our environment in flux. The La Conner, Washington, museum's mission is to connect "people with the art, diverse cultures and environments of the Northwest." The Seattle-based artist's newest work is based on her eight-week residency in the Antarctic during 2013, when she was admitted to the National Science Foundation's Antarctic Artist and Writers Program. (Disclosure: GLASS Quarterly editor Andrew Page moderated a discussion at the 2015 SOFA Expo in Chicago in which Surgent was a panelist.)

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Jamfactory
The interior display area at JamFactory, Adelaide

Tuesday December 15, 2015 | by Andrew Page

JamFactory announces new juried prize for Australian and New Zealand glass artists

When the Ranamok Prize was awarded for the final time in 2014, New Zealand and Australian artists lost the region's richest award recognizing the best work being done in glass. Today, JamFactory announced it would step in to fill the void with a new juried glass prize set to debut in 2016. Carrying an award of AU$20,000 (about $14,300 in U.S. dollars), the new biennial FUSE Glass Prize was born out of a lengthy discussion between the Adelaide-based art center and prominent glass collectors Jim and Helen Carreker. The couple are the founding donors for the prize in addition to six other individual collectors and a foundation.

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Tuesday December 15, 2015 | by managingeditor@glassquarterly.com

HOLIDAY SALE: For a limited time only, gift subscriptions to GLASS are half off

This winter, share the gift of GLASS: The UrbanGlass Art Quarterly with friends and family. Give the latest news from the field, lavish photography of stunning new sculptures, and critical insights into the most important artwork in the medium of glass by purchasing a gift subscription at an exceptionally low price. Existing subscribers can purchase a gift subscription of GLASS for only $17 (for U.S. subscriptions only) — half the standard rate.

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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.