Tuesday December 12, 2017 | by Angela Laurito
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Thursday December 7, 2017 | by Angela Laurito
HELP WANTED: University of the Arts in Philadelphia seeks assistant professor and glass coordinator for contract faculty position
FILED UNDER: Help Wanted
Tuesday December 5, 2017 | by Joseph Modica
Yayoi Kusama's latest infinity installations transfix at New York gallery
Thursday November 30, 2017 | by Angela Laurito
IN MEMORIAM: Zoltan Bohus (1941 - 2017)
FILED UNDER: In Memoriam
Tuesday November 28, 2017 | by Andrew Page
HOT OFF THE PRESSES: The Winter 2017-18 edition of Glass (#149)
Tuesday November 21, 2017 | by Malcolm Morano
GLASS Quarterly's online directory, an exhaustive list of education programs and suppliers, is a searchable treasure-trove of information
Thursday November 16, 2017 | by Joseph Modica
Vladimira Klumpar explores the organic and inorganic in new work in "Meadow" exhibition
Integrating childhood memories into her established geometric explorations of forms in volumes of cast glass, “Meadow” is the newest exhibit from Czech-artist Vladimira Klumpar. Using flowers as her subject, she has blended her well-known industrial aesthetic with a new embrace of organic forms. The pieces were created in her studio in northern Czech Republic, in the Northern Bohemian hamlet of Loučky, which translates to “Meadows” in English. The exhibition has just been extended through December 7, 2017, at Heller Gallery's Chelsea location.…
Thursday November 16, 2017 | by Angela Laurito
MUSEUMS: The Lowe to welcome a reworked Chihuly installation, a donation from the Andersons
FILED UNDER: New Work
In Spring 2018, the Lowe Art Museum at the University of Miami will unveil what it hopes will become its signature installation: Dale Chihuly’s Mosaic Persian. The piece was originally commissioned in 1998 for husband-and-wife art collectors Dale and Doug Anderson. Made up of 32 glass elements, the Chihuly Studio will be redesigning the assemblage for the Lowe, where it will have a "relaunch" in a new configuration, 20 years after its initial creation.…
Thursday November 9, 2017 | by Angela Laurito
EXHIBITION: Jim Butler's New York solo painting show is all about his fascination with glass
FILED UNDER: Exhibition
“Mercurial and fixed,” “familiar albeit fantastical.” Paradoxical terms such as these came up repeatedly in conversations with painter Jim Butler as he discussed his new "Synaptic Reverb" series on view at New York's Tibor de Nagy Gallery through December 22, 2017. The five glass-inspired large-scale canvases were created over the past two years, and each represents a detailed investigation of the behavior of light passing through glass. The oil on canvas images will tempt you to reach out and touch their intricate detailing and labyrinthine extensions of the glass sculptures, testament to Butler's skill with a brush, but also his keen insights into the qualities that distinguish glass from any other medium.…
Wednesday November 8, 2017 | by Joseph Modica
Imaging the Brain: David Gappa's installation at the University of Texas uses glass and light to illustrate synaptic firing
A synapse is the structure that connects neurons in the brain, linking then together so that electrical signals can be transmitted to create thoughts, memories, and experiences. A single synapse can fire 50-times a second, a sequence that is multiplied for hundreds of trillions of times during the normal synaptic functioning in the brain. If this is hard to conceptualize, artist David Gappa created a visual tool to illustrate. The result of Gappa's efforts is Introspection, a massive light fixture illuminating the room with a vibrant luminescent display, Each flicker, pulse, or flash of light in the over thousand hand-blown glass objects shows the viewer what a group of synapses does a billion-times an hour. His largest creation yet, the monumental work was unveiled on October 12, 2017 at the University of Texas' Brain Performance Institute. …