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Cocktail Table Fire

Jessica Jane Julius (far left) and Erica Rosenfeld (far right) with their "Cocktail Table" installation at an early Burnt Asphalt performance.

Tuesday September 23, 2025 | by Andrew Page

CONVERSATION: Erica Rosenfeld and Jessica Jane Julius discuss how their sold-out "madeline moment" takes the Burnt Asphalt Family into new terrain

Is it a dinner party, performance art event, or interactive art exhibition? The 5-course food event titled A Madeleine Moment is all of the above. Referencing the way a culinary experience can trigger vivid childhood memories, as Marcel Proust described in the novel Remembrance of Things Past, the event is just the latest in a long line of Burnt Asphalt Family performance-art happenings. It blurs the lines between performer and audience, art and food, and ultimately seeks to erase the boundary between art and life, itself. Among the few things one can say for sure about the proceedings set to take place at the Agnes Varis Art Center this coming Saturday, September 27, is that it is curated by longtime collaborators Erica Rosenfeld and Jessica Jane Julius, supports the Brooklyn arts non-profit UrbanGlass, and will involve a large community of creative friends. It will also exhibit artwork by artists such as Jen Monroe aka Bad Taste, Deborah Czeresko, Einar and Jamex De la Torre, Andrea Dezsö, Cedric Mitchell, Leo Tecosky, Jessica Tsai, among many others. After the opening, the exhibition will remain on view through November 8, 2025. (One more detail: tickets are completely sold out though Rosenfeld and Julius will return at the end of the exhibition in early November for a closing event that will be part of the UrbanGlass Academic Symposium, and open to all attendees of that three-day event.)

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Thursday September 18, 2025 | by Andrew Page

In a down market for art, Rago readies for "world-class offering" in auction that brings together three notable private collections

While its main activities take place at its headquarters in Lambertville, New Jersey, Rago Auctions also maintains a showroom in Chelsea, one of Manhattan's most important art gallery neighborhoods. Considering its prime location, the first-floor gallery at 501 W 20th Street is usually dedicated to high-profile paintings or contemporary photography, but recently it has also been showcasing its Contemporary Glass Sale coming up on September 19th, which partner Suzanne Perrault says is an indication of the work's importance.

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Walter Lieberman Russell Johnson Martin Janecky

Walter Lieberman draws an elaborate chalk image on the floor of the Museum of Glass hotshop during a Martin Janecky residency making work inspired by the Day of the Dead. photo: russell johnson

Wednesday August 27, 2025 | by Andrew Page

CONVERSATION: Walter Lieberman on his Museum of Glass chalk drawings featured in the Fall edition of Glass (#180)

Walter Lieberman has always loved to draw. Though he initially decided to study tech at university, art would prove to be his calling. After a friend showed him the glassblowing process, Walter left Carnegie Mellon and his plans for a computer-studies degree to study under Dan Dailey at Mass Art. His mother's graduation gift of a Pilchuck summer course in 1978 sparked a connection to the glass school and the dynamic community of the Pacific Northwest. Though he grew up in New York City, Walter settled in Seattle, where he became a fixture in the glass scene, supporting himself by selling his artwork, and enjoying regular exhibitions at Traver and other galleries for his own work and his frequent collaborations with Dick Weiss.

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Crystal Horizon

John Kiley, Crystal Horizon, 2025. Optic glass. H 10 1/2, W 25, D 11 in. courtesy: traver gallery, seattle

Sunday August 3, 2025 | by Oscar Bembury

John Kiley moves his evolving language of broken glass forward with his latest exhibition: "Horizons" at Traver

Artist John Kiley has made a career out of intervening in the geometry of glass sculptures, whether with cold-shop tools to cut away sections of blown vessels, or with blunt force to fracture it, and then rebuild it, always with great precision to detail and innovative creative processes.

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Friday July 11, 2025 | by Oscar Bembury

Coming off strong gala fundraising results, GlassRoots is hopeful expansion plans can finally move forward

Since 2001, GlassRoots has been working with underserved teens and young adults to offer skills training in glassmaking and business development in the Newark, New Jersey, area. The nonprofit art center has faced hardships in the past with a long-delayed building expansion and a series of executive directors. The April 13, 2025, passing of Dena Lowenbach, the nonprofit's longtime champion, board chair, and Lifetime Trustee (an honorific title given to honor her life-long commitment to to serve on the organization's board), has been an especially difficult challenge to this organization dedicated to uplifting youth. Against this backdrop, it was uncertain how the organization's annual GlassBall would fare, but the successful June 5th event could signal a turning point for GlassRoots and its current management team, which is led by executive director Carol Losos, who, together with the GlassRoots Board of Trustees, oversees the nonprofit through strategic leadership.

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Brian Clarke

Brian Clarke in his Studio. photo of Brian Clarke in 2007

Friday July 11, 2025 | by Oscar Bembury

IN MEMORIAM: Brian Clarke (1953 - 2025)

Sir Brian Clarke, the fearless stained-glass artist who was always looking for new ways to incorporate emerging technology in his ground-breaking work, passed away July 1, 2025. Born on July 2nd 1953, in Oldham Lancashire England, Clarke showed his talent for stained-glass early, completing his first major commission of 20 windows for the Church of St. Lawrence in Longridge, at the tender age of 22. He also developed a colorful public profile in the London art and fashion scene, once described by The Daily Telegraph as "the rock star of stained-glass" for his frequent appearances in the gossip pages of newspapers.

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Monday June 30, 2025 | by Oscar Bembury

The Fuller Craft Museum welcomes Jennifer Chrzanowski as its next executive director

On July 1, 2025, a new executive director will take the reins at The Fuller Craft Museum in Brockton, Massachusetts. When Jennifer Chrzanowski takes over from interim director Beth McLaughlin, she will arrive with expectations of bringing her fundraising prowess with her. In her previous role as deputy director of the Academy Art Museum in Easton, Maryland, she helped to manage a $1.7M operating budget, $7.4M endowment, 24,000 square-foot building, and 1,700 object collection. Among her accomplishments at the AAM, which describes itself as "the cultural hub of the Eastern Shore for art, music, and educational programming," Chrzanowski launched a successful 3-day craft show. In addition to this she helped AAM grow its social-media presence, achieved record-breaking fundraising results, and more than doubled exhibition funding through key partnerships. (Charlotte Potter Kasic, known to Glass readers for her tenure at the Chrysler Museum of Art Glass Studio and Barry Art Museum, was named director of AAM in September of 2024).

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Tuesday June 10, 2025 | by Andrew Page

UrbanGlass welcomes new director of development Haley Andres

UrbanGlass has announced that Haley Andres (she/her/hers) has rejoined the organization as director of development (she previously had been on staff from 2017–18). Among her goals will be deepening the arts nonprofit's relationships with donors while also pursuing new funding opportunities through foundations as well as corporate and local/state government partnerships. Andres told the Glass Quarterly Hot Sheet she plans to focus on diversifying and growing UrbanGlass's contributed revenue streams to support the Brooklyn non-profit's various programs, which include publishing, small business development, science and technology, youth education, women's economic empowerment, material studies, and other activities at the intersection of art, design, and craft. (UrbanGlass publishes Glass Quarterly magazine and the Glass Quarterly Hot Sheet).

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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.