Placeholder

Tuesday January 5, 2010 | by Andrew Page

Bad Day for Boro: Philadelphia Glass Works and Silica Galleries closes its doors

FILED UNDER: News

The fire has apparently gone out for the 2,100-square-foot flame- and cold-working shop of Philadelphia Glass Works. courtesy: www.phillyglassworks.com

For Philadelphia’s flameworker community, 2010 got off to a rough start. Earlier today, the owners of 7-year-old nonprofit Philadelphia Glass Works and its younger commercial gallery operation, Silica Galleries, issued an announcement that they would be closing their doors, apparently for good.

Attempts to get further details via telephone and email were unsuccessful in the hours after the news was made public in an email blast. The unsigned email announcement read as follows:

“You know and we know Silica Galleries and Philadelphia Glass Works has been thrown through some rough seas over the past few years. But we truly appreciate your business! We have decided to call it quits and move on to other things, therefore Silica Galleries and Philadelphia Glass Works will no longer be open.”


Philadelphia Glass Works was originally founded by Nathan Purcell and Ian Kerr in 2003, in the West Philadelphia section of the city. They moved to the Northern Liberties section of Philadelphia as they expanded and opened a commercial gallery in 2008. The nonprofit and gallery were a bid to take flameworking into sculptural territory, and Silica was an exhibitor at two SOFA CHICAGO fairs, presenting unconventional three-dimensional work informed by science fiction and psychedelia.

While their Philadelphia operations appear to be closed, the announcement states that they will maintain their Williamsburg, Brooklyn, operations. Their recently opened Easy Street Gallery, which exhibits sculpture but also sells high-end borosilicate pipes, will become the focus.

The announcement continues: “We hope to continue working with you there as well as in all our other future endeavors.”

Currently on exhibit at Easy Street is the work of J.A.G. (just another glassblower) in an exhibit that will be open through January 15th, 2010.

For More Information:

Easy Street Gallery
155 Grand Street
Brooklyn, NY 11211
Telephone: 718-388-8257
Email: chillin@easystreetbrooklyn.com
Website: www.easystreetbrooklyn.com

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.