Placeholder

Viewing:


Tuesday December 4, 2001 | by laguiri

tk in progress SEEN: Flotsam, jetsam, and glass in Nancy Cohen’s “By Feel”

FILED UNDER: Seen
Nancy Cohen has a BFA from Rochester Institute of Technology and an MFA from Columbia University. Recent large-scale projects have included installations in Karmiel, Israel, the CODA Museum in Holland, one based on the Hudson River for the Katonah Museum of Art in NY and a collaboration with marine biologists and environmentalists based on the Mullica River for the Noyes Museum of Art in Oceanville, NJ. Cohen has been awarded a Pollack Krasner grant and Fellowships in Sculpture and Works on Paper from the NJ State Council on the Arts. Her work can be found in the permanent collections of the NJ State Museum, Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Museum, Montclair Art Museum, & Yale University Art Museum among many others. Recent exhibitions have included “Permeable Matter” a solo exhibition at Kean University in Union, NJ and “Green: The Color & the Cause,” at the Textile Museum in Washington D.C. Cohen was born in Queens, NY and lives in Jersey City, NJ.

Continue Reading

Tuesday December 4, 2001 | by Anna Tatelman

OPENING: Karen Donnellan explores the process of creation

FILED UNDER: Uncategorized
While so much of our world is focused on completion – finishing a task, meeting a deadline, checking another item off the to-do list – artist Karen Donnellan is much more interested in this cycle of creation than the end results. In her first solo exhibition entitled “Essentia,” Donnellan’s creations ask us to focus upon and appreciate not her finished products, but upon the way these products were made.

Continue Reading

Tuesday December 4, 2001 | by ktmo5678

OPENING: Czech Center offers “Invitation” to examine glass tradition and innovation

FILED UNDER: Exhibition
Beginning April 18th, The Czech Center based in New York will open a new glass exhibition entitled “Invitation.” This exhibit asks us to scrutinize the relationship between tradition and innovation within the glass world by displaying the works of both sixty and six years ago, of abroad and near locations, of experienced and new artists, of functionality and design – and exploring their complex intersections.

Continue Reading

Tuesday December 4, 2001 | by Andrew Page

OPENING: Solo exhibition of Michael Joo

FILED UNDER: Uncategorized
All Access, 2011, Mirrored borosilicate glass, 35 × 15 × 12 in (88.9 × 38.1 × 30.5 cm)For his inaugural exhibition with Blain|Southern, Exit From the House of Being, Michael Joo has created a series of new sculptural works which aim to challenge and reformulate our understanding of space. Bringing together three groups of works so that they exist in dialogue, each engages the viewer in an assessment of spatial territory, referring to social, natural and personal boundaries. The ways in which we might conventionally quantify, physically experience or theoretically categorise our surrounding environment are subverted, as the materiality of each object and the syntax of the gallery space itself become fluid and unfixed.The artist’s practice endeavours to combine and foster links between seemingly contradictory states. Binary oppositions are dissolved as he brings them into balance; the physical and metaphysical, the organic and industrial, inclusion and exclusion, and movement and stasis are all explored as being intrinsically linked, one and part of the same thing. With this exhibition, Joo encourages us to consider the inherently unstable nature of space and identity. His interest in the process of material metamorphosis informs his use of unorthodox materials and techniques. Constructed from mirrored borosilicate glass, the Expanded Access works are composed of groups of delicate rope and stanchion forms which seem to simultaneously emerge from and melt into the structure of the gallery. Joo plays with the idea of malleable architectural space; the stanchions, which would traditionally dictate the rules of entry to a particular place, appear on the floor, walls and ceiling of the gallery. Thus, the artist suggests a new spatial arrangement, which does away with accepted social constructs.

Continue Reading

Tuesday December 4, 2001 | by laguiri

TK Getting Art: From the Archives: From East to West With Hiroshi Yamano, GLASS #44 (Summer 1991)

FILED UNDER: Uncategorized
Every Wednesday, GLASS Quarterly will excerpt an article from its archives. Founded in 1979 by Richard Yelle, the magazine remains the magazine of record for the contemporary glass art world. This week, we excerpt Yoriko Mizuta’s profile on Hiroshi Yamano and his application of metal work to glass art in. “From East to West With Hiroshi Yamano” originally appeared in GLASS #44, the Summer 1991 issue, and was translated from the Japanese by Kimiko Steiner.

Continue Reading

Tuesday December 4, 2001 | by Ruth Reader

Hu Bing @ Prow Art Space

FILED UNDER: Uncategorized
Last year the mobile telephone network, Sprint, made the unlikely decision to turn their retail show room in Manhattan’s Flat Iron building into an art space. The Prow Art Space now occupies the north most corner of the historic building, a triangular fishbowl of an artspace that looks over Madison Square Park.

Continue Reading

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.