Current Exhibition
MIXED-UP MOTLEY
This online gallery show is themed around multiples of objects.
Contrasting collections of items and glass in multiples.
noun: multiple
1.
a number that may be divided by another a certain number of times without a remainder.
noun: motley
1.
an incongruous mixture.
40 Contemporary Glass Society Members were selected from all the submissions we received and we are delighted to launch this varied show.
Launch date of this exhibition: 31st of October..
Launched on:31st October 2016
Artist:E John Lewis
Email:E John Lewis
Global Country of World Peace
Photographer: E John Lewis
Details: Approximate size 800mm x 600mm, Triple glazed unit
Sandblast sun rays on 3 faces within the triple glazed unit, sandblast sun rays on orange flashed glass, fused orange and yellow pieces and clear glass bevels bonded within the unit.
Contact: info@ejlewis-glass.com
Contact: info@ejlewis-glass.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Martin Cheek
Email:Martin Cheek
'School System'
Photographer: Martin Cheek
Details: Title: ' School System' Medium: Glass Fusions and Sicis GlassTiles
Description: This is a detail of a large underwater panel.
I thought that my little groups of 'Cheeky Fish' angel fish and sardines answered the brief!
Contact: Martin Cheek: mrtncheek@hotmail.co.uk
Contact: mrtncheek@hotmail.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Eva Reddy
Email:Eva Reddy
Eidolon Arca
Photographer: Eva Reddy
Details: 2016, Cast Glass Foxes with Flat and Flashed Glass Imagery,
The composition, Eidolon Arca, is a meditative space which seeks to personify the qualities and nature of glass and convey my idealisation of the material. The narratives I have integrated into this body of work draw upon my research of concepts of deities relative to ritual and cultural phenomenon; and how these are manifested into artefacts. The primary focus of my research exploration encompassed human relationships with nature and animals. I found that deities within mythologies are often depicted as anthropomorphic or animal-like. Throughout cultural history, animals play an important symbolic role as well as being a source of food and companionship.
I have specifically chosen to work with the fox metaphor because of its historical associations with fire and its ability to endure which is relative to glassmaking enduring history and evolving over time. The fox represents devotion to glass while simultaneously reflecting qualities of the material through colour, form and durability.
Artist:Noreen Todd
Email:Simon Bruntnell
Pod Family
Photographer: Simon Bruntnell
Details: H: 160mm. Diam: 130 mm each individual item
Kiln-formed glass, rolled up in the hot-shop and blown into vessel forms, The pieces
are hand-finished and shaped with Diamond pads to remove the surface and give a
porcelain look and feel to the surface. The work plays on the chemical reactions
brought about when various coloured glasses are heated next to each other.
Contact: www.noreentodd@btinternet.com
Contact: www.noreentodd@btinternet.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:David Frazer
G-U238-mmy Bears
Bullseye Ruby pink & Gaffer Uranium green
Artist:Charles ogle-Rush
My beach huts
Details: Glass on Glass
300 odd pieces of glass stuck together.
Contact: charlesor@gmail.com
Contact: charlesor@gmail.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Kate Urban
Email:Pierre Scheys
Lords of the Woods
Photographer: Pierre Scheys, Photographer
Details: Life-sized cast glass with ethically-sourced natural antlers/horns.
These three cast glass creations reflect the various moods of fantasy woodland creatures.
Gaetan: goat horns; 14kg clear cast glass; 26cm x 23cm x25cm
Daniel: red deer antlers; 24kg clear cast glass; 36cm x 26cm x 35cm
Jean-Baptiste: roe deer antlers; 17kg clear cast glass; 33cm x 34cm x25cm
Contact: kate@kateurbancreations.com
Contact: kate@kateurbancreations.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Hannah Gibson Glass
Email:Hannah Gibson
Sweet Nothings
Photographer: Hannah Gibson
Details: Cast Glass
Sweet Nothings
Contact: Hannah@hannahgibsonglass.co.uk
Contact: Hannah@hannahgibsonglass.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Douglas Hogg
A Scottish Borders based artist working predominantly in contemporary stained and architectual glass practice, murals, mosaics and installations.
Email: ddhogg2@btinternet.com
Web: www.douglashogg.com
Contact: ddhogg2@btinternet.com
Contact: ddhogg2@btinternet.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Rebecca Laister
Details: Rebecca Laister
A Collection Of Reactive Glass
Three vessels using dense white and french white Bullseye Glass to utilise their reactive properties.
Contact: member@rlaister.freeserve.co.uk
Contact: member@rlaister.freeserve.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Emma Butler-Cole Aiken
Email:Emma Butler-Cole Aiken
Robins
Photographer: Emma Butler-Cole Aiken
Details: A group of fused and painted glass robins
Contact: ebcaglass@yahoo.co.uk
Contact: ebcaglass@yahoo.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Fiona Bryer
Email:Fiona Bryer
Mixed Bag of Jelly Babies
Photographer: Fiona Bryer
Details: Jelly Babies 3 cm
An incongruous motley mixture of jelly babies made from cast glass, each jelly baby is the actual size of a sweet and colours are matched to the flavours!
Contact: www.fionabryerglass.co.uk
Contact: www.fionabryerglass.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Marjorie Sanders
Reverie
Details: H 3.5 x W 14 x D 3.5 in. Reactive Cloud Opal with subtle gradations of aquamarine and soft grays, blues and greens.
Two shallow bowls with three "drop" vessels. Kiln-fused, powder painted, dropped over hand built suspension molds, saw-cut, slumped, belt sanded and sandblasted to achieve the thin-walled translucence and matte surfaces reminiscent of Seihakuji porcelain.
Contact: Marjorie Sanders
Contact: Marjorie Sanders
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Linda Morley
Email:Linda Morley
Forgotten Forest
Photographer: Linda Morley
Details: Moulded from real leaves, a collection of Bullseye Frit sculptures.
Based on the acanthus leaf design found on many 17th century roll top desks, and echoing the quills that would have been used
then, this collection of delicate glass represents the considered words penned and long since forgotten over time.
Contact: morleyla@yahoo.co.uk
Contact: morleyla@yahoo.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Bruce Marks
New Boat
New Boat, made of murrinis.
40cm wide, 25cm H, and retails for 2800.
Contact: outofthefire1@yahoo.com
Contact: outofthefire1@yahoo.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:JanHein van Stiphout
Email:Margriet Schoenmakers
Planetoids - Rule your own world
Photographer: Margriet Schoenmakers
Details: Over 300 pieces - each 10 x 10 x 28 cm
Like planets the appearance of glass is determined by the use of minerals and metals.
So also these small planetoids, made of flame worked soda lime glass, are as colourful as the originals.
These planetoids are produced on a Conkinect torch.
Contact: stipglas@stipglas.com
Contact: stipglas@stipglas.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Lynda Addison
Email:Johnny Korkman
Motley and Mimicry, Brazilian Butterflies
Photographer: Johnny Korkman
Details: Fused glass, 49 x 37 cms, 200€
These butterflies are one panel of a series of five, made for the upcoming exhibition “Origin of Life: Evolution vs.Creation” at Caisa Cultural Centre, Helsinki.
This panel illustrates Müllerian Mimicry. Fritz Müller was a contemporary of Darwin, and sent Darwin examples of different forms of a single species of Brazilian butterfly. The paler specimens mimic another species living close by. Müller’s great discovery concerned the resemblance between two or more unpalatable species which are protected from predators capable of learning, in this case birds.The potential prey uses colour to advertise how unpleasant it is to eat, and the bird learns to avoid that colour butterfly. The mimic does not actually need to be unpalatable, it just needs to resemble another species that is, and therefore it survives. Brazilian butterflies provide some extraordinary examples of mimicry and Müller believed such a system of mimicry could only come about by means of evolution by natural selection.
I studied Natural Science and evolution at University, so it was a joy to unite science and art in these exhibition pieces.
Contact: lyndaaddison@hotmail.com
Contact: lyndaaddison@hotmail.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Dominic Fonde
Email:Island Photo Joe
Girl Power
Photographer: Island Photo Joe
Details: Drill engraved on sheet glass in hand made frame. 42cm long x 26cm tall
Like everything else feminism has been commodified and marketed...
"Cosmetics fashion and beauty commodities used to be marketed with the implicit promise that this product will make you loveable. Today these products are sold with the suggestion that this will make you powerful... Girl Power is removed from any context of girls social authority and represented solely in relationship to the development and maintenance of physical beauty".
From Youth, Gender and Generation in Contemporary Teen Girls Media. Caryn Murphy.
Contact: dominicfondeglass@gmail.com
Contact: dominicfondeglass@gmail.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Jane Littlefield
Email:Jane Littlefield
Fallen Leaves
Photographer: Jane Littlefield
Details: Painted stained glass leaves with decals
Each leaf is individually made with a mixture of glass painting and ceramic decal.
Contact: Jane@janelittlefieldglass.co.uk
Contact: Jane@janelittlefieldglass.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Crispian Heath
Email:Own
Seeds With Wings
Photographer: Own
Details: heights 42 - 47cm
Cast glass group of Sycamore Seeds
Contact: mail@crispianheath.com
Contact: mail@crispianheath.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Frances Arkle
Email:Frances Arkle
Juggling with Stripes and Spots
Photographer: Frances Arkle
Details: H13 xW13 cm
Four 5 x 5 cm squares of white opal glass on which further layers of glass have been fused.
Contact: glass@francesarkle.co.uk
Contact: glass@francesarkle.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Liz Renee
Email:Liz Renee
Bottle Neck, Great Neck, Long Island
Photographer: Liz Renee
Details: 14" x 8" x 6.5"
beach glass and found objects (collected from Great Neck Bay, LI, NY) mosaic assemblage
Contact: liz@nartiqueglass.com
Contact: liz@nartiqueglass.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Angela Muntus
Email:Angela Muntus
Blue and yellow fused glass platters
Photographer: Angela Muntus
Details: Bullseye sheet glass/stringers
Fused sheet glass and stringers, cut up and arranged in patterns, fused again, then slumped
Contact: Angela Muntus
Contact: Angela Muntus
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:James Maskrey
Email:Paul Adair
Cook's Collection
Photographer: Paul Adair
Details: Free blown glass containers, solid formed and blown glass inclusions, printed and distressed paper labels H40xW100xD15cm group
Artist:Dina Priess dos Santos
Email:Valentini
corals
Photographer: Valentini
Details: lost wax cast
each approx. H14x W23x D23cm
Contact: www.dinapriessdossantos.com
Contact: www.dinapriessdossantos.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Jenia Gorfunkel
Email:Jenia Gorfunkel
Waterlily: a trio of nesting bowls
Photographer: Jenia Gorfunkel
Details: Three nesting bowls in a shape of a waterlily
These bowls are made of fused recycled bottle glass.
Contact: jgorfunkel@hotmail.com
Contact: jgorfunkel@hotmail.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Liz Waugh McManus
Email:L.Waugh McManus
Flotilla
Photographer: L.Waugh McManus
Details: Each element approx 4.5 X 3.5 X 4-8.5cm
In memory of playing with walnut and leaf boats in puddles (cast glass)
Artist:Elena Fleury-Rojo
Email:Elena Fleury-Rojo
Antithesis Collection - Red Coral
Photographer: Elena Fleury-Rojo
Details: Flameworked Glass
This is my latest collection, which investigates the contradiction of the fixity and fluidity of coral.
Contact: elena@redflowerglass.co.uk or Facebook - Red Flower Glass
Contact: elena@redflowerglass.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Tali Grinshpan
Email:Keay Edwards
Promises
Photographer: Keay Edwards
Details: 23" x 10" x 10"
2016
Pate de Verre, Mixed media
Contact: taligd@gmail.com
Contact: taligd@gmail.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Anne Somers
Email:Anne Somers
Snowflakes
Photographer: Anne Somers
Details: Fused glass snowflakes approx. 12cm in diameter
Fused glass snowflakes
Contact: Arkglass@btinternet.com
Contact: Arkglass@btinternet.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Rebecca Weddell
Email:Jim Holden
Wander/wonder
Photographer: Jim Holden
Two sets of beads with meanders of stringerwork over a reactive glass base. In the flame, stringers find their own unique direction - sometimes this way, sometimes that way. Even beads with the same design are different, and it is these differences in repeated patterns that keep the eye moving across the subtly diverse work.
Contact: beads@rebeccaweddell.co.uk
Contact: beads@rebeccaweddell.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Batia Mach Shepherd
Email:Batia Mach Shepherd
We R still the same
Photographer: Batia Mach Shepherd
Details: No matter what color we r, what view of life we have, we R still the same
Cast glass, Lost wax. 6 pieces, 25cm (H) x 8cm (w) x 4cm (d)
sand blasted
Contact: batia.mach@gmail.com
Contact: batia.mach@gmail.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Rachel Elliott
Email:Rich Jobling
Surf & Turf
Photographer: Rich Jobling
Details: 10 x 7 x 1cms individually
Water-jet cut glass with screen-printed and hand-painted kiln fired enamels.
This installation plays on the name of a dish that combines seafood with meat by mapping out a coastline onto the canvas of a field of hares. The nautical map used was surveyed and engraved by John Ainslie in 1785 and covers from Berwick upon Tweed to Fife.
Contact: Rachel Elliott
Contact: Rachel Elliott
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Milly Frances
Email:Milly Frances
Safety in Numbers
Photographer: Milly Frances
Details: Cast acid dipped glass. Dimensions variable.
Contact: 077 4040 5185 - UK
Contact: 077 4040 5185
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Michèle Oberdieck
Email:Sylvain Deleu
Studies in Blue
Photographer: Sylvain Deleu
Details: from 31cm high (bowl) to 51cm high
free blown glass,left vessel using Graal technique
Contact: oberdieckm@gmail.com
Contact: oberdieckm@gmail.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Agelos Papadakis
Email:Agelos Papadakis
Like glass in the sea, still image from video.
Photographer: Agelos Papadakis
Details: Hot formed glass, video projection, variable dimentions, 2016
Like glass in the sea’ is a triptych composition that creates a narrative between glass, light and the moving image that explores the conceptual and visual interplay between those elements and their metaphorical meaning.
Full video on: http://www.agelospapadakis.com/
Artist:Phil Vickery
Email:Jo Howell
Distracted Thoughts
Photographer: Jo Howell
Details: Mould blown glass, cut and polished, and UV mounted on float glass.
Distracted Thoughts is a sculpture based on ADHD. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder is a biological, brain-based condition that is characterized by poor attention and distractibility and/or hyperactive and impulsive behaviors. Distractibility, forgetfulness, frustrations, restlessness, isolation, difficulty organizing self, tendency to act or blurt out before thinking, difficulty maintaining long-term relationships- these are just a few of the issues individuals with ADHD.
Contact: philvickeryglass@hotmail.co.uk
Contact: philvickeryglass@hotmail.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Vikki Stacey
Email:Ester Segarra
Through any door or window?
Photographer: Ester Segarra photograph
Details: Three separate coloured cast glass pieces.
Representational houses with a door or windows to see in or through.
4x7.5x2; 6x3x3; 6x2x2.5 cms
Contact: Vikki Stacey; vikkistacey@uwclub.net; 07753226836
Contact: 07753226836
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:E John Lewis
Email:E John Lewis
Global Country of World Peace
Photographer: E John Lewis
Details: Approximate size 800mm x 600mm, Triple glazed unit
Sandblast sun rays on 3 faces within the triple glazed unit, sandblast sun rays on orange flashed glass, fused orange and yellow pieces and clear glass bevels bonded within the unit.
Contact: info@ejlewis-glass.com
Contact: info@ejlewis-glass.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Martin Cheek
Email:Martin Cheek
'School System'
Photographer: Martin Cheek
Details: Title: ' School System' Medium: Glass Fusions and Sicis GlassTiles
Description: This is a detail of a large underwater panel.
I thought that my little groups of 'Cheeky Fish' angel fish and sardines answered the brief!
Contact: Martin Cheek: mrtncheek@hotmail.co.uk
Contact: mrtncheek@hotmail.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Eva Reddy
Email:Eva Reddy
Eidolon Arca
Photographer: Eva Reddy
Details: 2016, Cast Glass Foxes with Flat and Flashed Glass Imagery,
The composition, Eidolon Arca, is a meditative space which seeks to personify the qualities and nature of glass and convey my idealisation of the material. The narratives I have integrated into this body of work draw upon my research of concepts of deities relative to ritual and cultural phenomenon; and how these are manifested into artefacts. The primary focus of my research exploration encompassed human relationships with nature and animals. I found that deities within mythologies are often depicted as anthropomorphic or animal-like. Throughout cultural history, animals play an important symbolic role as well as being a source of food and companionship.
I have specifically chosen to work with the fox metaphor because of its historical associations with fire and its ability to endure which is relative to glassmaking enduring history and evolving over time. The fox represents devotion to glass while simultaneously reflecting qualities of the material through colour, form and durability.
Artist:Noreen Todd
Email:Simon Bruntnell
Pod Family
Photographer: Simon Bruntnell
Details: H: 160mm. Diam: 130 mm each individual item
Kiln-formed glass, rolled up in the hot-shop and blown into vessel forms, The pieces
are hand-finished and shaped with Diamond pads to remove the surface and give a
porcelain look and feel to the surface. The work plays on the chemical reactions
brought about when various coloured glasses are heated next to each other.
Contact: www.noreentodd@btinternet.com
Contact: www.noreentodd@btinternet.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:David Frazer
G-U238-mmy Bears
Bullseye Ruby pink & Gaffer Uranium green
Artist:Charles ogle-Rush
My beach huts
Details: Glass on Glass
300 odd pieces of glass stuck together.
Contact: charlesor@gmail.com
Contact: charlesor@gmail.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Kate Urban
Email:Pierre Scheys
Lords of the Woods
Photographer: Pierre Scheys, Photographer
Details: Life-sized cast glass with ethically-sourced natural antlers/horns.
These three cast glass creations reflect the various moods of fantasy woodland creatures.
Gaetan: goat horns; 14kg clear cast glass; 26cm x 23cm x25cm
Daniel: red deer antlers; 24kg clear cast glass; 36cm x 26cm x 35cm
Jean-Baptiste: roe deer antlers; 17kg clear cast glass; 33cm x 34cm x25cm
Contact: kate@kateurbancreations.com
Contact: kate@kateurbancreations.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Hannah Gibson Glass
Email:Hannah Gibson
Sweet Nothings
Photographer: Hannah Gibson
Details: Cast Glass
Sweet Nothings
Contact: Hannah@hannahgibsonglass.co.uk
Contact: Hannah@hannahgibsonglass.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Douglas Hogg
A Scottish Borders based artist working predominantly in contemporary stained and architectual glass practice, murals, mosaics and installations.
Email: ddhogg2@btinternet.com
Web: www.douglashogg.com
Contact: ddhogg2@btinternet.com
Contact: ddhogg2@btinternet.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Rebecca Laister
Details: Rebecca Laister
A Collection Of Reactive Glass
Three vessels using dense white and french white Bullseye Glass to utilise their reactive properties.
Contact: member@rlaister.freeserve.co.uk
Contact: member@rlaister.freeserve.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Emma Butler-Cole Aiken
Email:Emma Butler-Cole Aiken
Robins
Photographer: Emma Butler-Cole Aiken
Details: A group of fused and painted glass robins
Contact: ebcaglass@yahoo.co.uk
Contact: ebcaglass@yahoo.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Fiona Bryer
Email:Fiona Bryer
Mixed Bag of Jelly Babies
Photographer: Fiona Bryer
Details: Jelly Babies 3 cm
An incongruous motley mixture of jelly babies made from cast glass, each jelly baby is the actual size of a sweet and colours are matched to the flavours!
Contact: www.fionabryerglass.co.uk
Contact: www.fionabryerglass.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Marjorie Sanders
Reverie
Details: H 3.5 x W 14 x D 3.5 in. Reactive Cloud Opal with subtle gradations of aquamarine and soft grays, blues and greens.
Two shallow bowls with three "drop" vessels. Kiln-fused, powder painted, dropped over hand built suspension molds, saw-cut, slumped, belt sanded and sandblasted to achieve the thin-walled translucence and matte surfaces reminiscent of Seihakuji porcelain.
Contact: Marjorie Sanders
Contact: Marjorie Sanders
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Linda Morley
Email:Linda Morley
Forgotten Forest
Photographer: Linda Morley
Details: Moulded from real leaves, a collection of Bullseye Frit sculptures.
Based on the acanthus leaf design found on many 17th century roll top desks, and echoing the quills that would have been used
then, this collection of delicate glass represents the considered words penned and long since forgotten over time.
Contact: morleyla@yahoo.co.uk
Contact: morleyla@yahoo.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Bruce Marks
New Boat
New Boat, made of murrinis.
40cm wide, 25cm H, and retails for 2800.
Contact: outofthefire1@yahoo.com
Contact: outofthefire1@yahoo.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:JanHein van Stiphout
Email:Margriet Schoenmakers
Planetoids - Rule your own world
Photographer: Margriet Schoenmakers
Details: Over 300 pieces - each 10 x 10 x 28 cm
Like planets the appearance of glass is determined by the use of minerals and metals.
So also these small planetoids, made of flame worked soda lime glass, are as colourful as the originals.
These planetoids are produced on a Conkinect torch.
Contact: stipglas@stipglas.com
Contact: stipglas@stipglas.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Lynda Addison
Email:Johnny Korkman
Motley and Mimicry, Brazilian Butterflies
Photographer: Johnny Korkman
Details: Fused glass, 49 x 37 cms, 200€
These butterflies are one panel of a series of five, made for the upcoming exhibition “Origin of Life: Evolution vs.Creation” at Caisa Cultural Centre, Helsinki.
This panel illustrates Müllerian Mimicry. Fritz Müller was a contemporary of Darwin, and sent Darwin examples of different forms of a single species of Brazilian butterfly. The paler specimens mimic another species living close by. Müller’s great discovery concerned the resemblance between two or more unpalatable species which are protected from predators capable of learning, in this case birds.The potential prey uses colour to advertise how unpleasant it is to eat, and the bird learns to avoid that colour butterfly. The mimic does not actually need to be unpalatable, it just needs to resemble another species that is, and therefore it survives. Brazilian butterflies provide some extraordinary examples of mimicry and Müller believed such a system of mimicry could only come about by means of evolution by natural selection.
I studied Natural Science and evolution at University, so it was a joy to unite science and art in these exhibition pieces.
Contact: lyndaaddison@hotmail.com
Contact: lyndaaddison@hotmail.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Dominic Fonde
Email:Island Photo Joe
Girl Power
Photographer: Island Photo Joe
Details: Drill engraved on sheet glass in hand made frame. 42cm long x 26cm tall
Like everything else feminism has been commodified and marketed...
"Cosmetics fashion and beauty commodities used to be marketed with the implicit promise that this product will make you loveable. Today these products are sold with the suggestion that this will make you powerful... Girl Power is removed from any context of girls social authority and represented solely in relationship to the development and maintenance of physical beauty".
From Youth, Gender and Generation in Contemporary Teen Girls Media. Caryn Murphy.
Contact: dominicfondeglass@gmail.com
Contact: dominicfondeglass@gmail.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Jane Littlefield
Email:Jane Littlefield
Fallen Leaves
Photographer: Jane Littlefield
Details: Painted stained glass leaves with decals
Each leaf is individually made with a mixture of glass painting and ceramic decal.
Contact: Jane@janelittlefieldglass.co.uk
Contact: Jane@janelittlefieldglass.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Crispian Heath
Email:Own
Seeds With Wings
Photographer: Own
Details: heights 42 - 47cm
Cast glass group of Sycamore Seeds
Contact: mail@crispianheath.com
Contact: mail@crispianheath.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Frances Arkle
Email:Frances Arkle
Juggling with Stripes and Spots
Photographer: Frances Arkle
Details: H13 xW13 cm
Four 5 x 5 cm squares of white opal glass on which further layers of glass have been fused.
Contact: glass@francesarkle.co.uk
Contact: glass@francesarkle.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Liz Renee
Email:Liz Renee
Bottle Neck, Great Neck, Long Island
Photographer: Liz Renee
Details: 14" x 8" x 6.5"
beach glass and found objects (collected from Great Neck Bay, LI, NY) mosaic assemblage
Contact: liz@nartiqueglass.com
Contact: liz@nartiqueglass.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Angela Muntus
Email:Angela Muntus
Blue and yellow fused glass platters
Photographer: Angela Muntus
Details: Bullseye sheet glass/stringers
Fused sheet glass and stringers, cut up and arranged in patterns, fused again, then slumped
Contact: Angela Muntus
Contact: Angela Muntus
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:James Maskrey
Email:Paul Adair
Cook's Collection
Photographer: Paul Adair
Details: Free blown glass containers, solid formed and blown glass inclusions, printed and distressed paper labels H40xW100xD15cm group
Artist:Dina Priess dos Santos
Email:Valentini
corals
Photographer: Valentini
Details: lost wax cast
each approx. H14x W23x D23cm
Contact: www.dinapriessdossantos.com
Contact: www.dinapriessdossantos.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Jenia Gorfunkel
Email:Jenia Gorfunkel
Waterlily: a trio of nesting bowls
Photographer: Jenia Gorfunkel
Details: Three nesting bowls in a shape of a waterlily
These bowls are made of fused recycled bottle glass.
Contact: jgorfunkel@hotmail.com
Contact: jgorfunkel@hotmail.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Liz Waugh McManus
Email:L.Waugh McManus
Flotilla
Photographer: L.Waugh McManus
Details: Each element approx 4.5 X 3.5 X 4-8.5cm
In memory of playing with walnut and leaf boats in puddles (cast glass)
Artist:Elena Fleury-Rojo
Email:Elena Fleury-Rojo
Antithesis Collection - Red Coral
Photographer: Elena Fleury-Rojo
Details: Flameworked Glass
This is my latest collection, which investigates the contradiction of the fixity and fluidity of coral.
Contact: elena@redflowerglass.co.uk or Facebook - Red Flower Glass
Contact: elena@redflowerglass.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Tali Grinshpan
Email:Keay Edwards
Promises
Photographer: Keay Edwards
Details: 23" x 10" x 10"
2016
Pate de Verre, Mixed media
Contact: taligd@gmail.com
Contact: taligd@gmail.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Anne Somers
Email:Anne Somers
Snowflakes
Photographer: Anne Somers
Details: Fused glass snowflakes approx. 12cm in diameter
Fused glass snowflakes
Contact: Arkglass@btinternet.com
Contact: Arkglass@btinternet.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Rebecca Weddell
Email:Jim Holden
Wander/wonder
Photographer: Jim Holden
Two sets of beads with meanders of stringerwork over a reactive glass base. In the flame, stringers find their own unique direction - sometimes this way, sometimes that way. Even beads with the same design are different, and it is these differences in repeated patterns that keep the eye moving across the subtly diverse work.
Contact: beads@rebeccaweddell.co.uk
Contact: beads@rebeccaweddell.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Batia Mach Shepherd
Email:Batia Mach Shepherd
We R still the same
Photographer: Batia Mach Shepherd
Details: No matter what color we r, what view of life we have, we R still the same
Cast glass, Lost wax. 6 pieces, 25cm (H) x 8cm (w) x 4cm (d)
sand blasted
Contact: batia.mach@gmail.com
Contact: batia.mach@gmail.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Rachel Elliott
Email:Rich Jobling
Surf & Turf
Photographer: Rich Jobling
Details: 10 x 7 x 1cms individually
Water-jet cut glass with screen-printed and hand-painted kiln fired enamels.
This installation plays on the name of a dish that combines seafood with meat by mapping out a coastline onto the canvas of a field of hares. The nautical map used was surveyed and engraved by John Ainslie in 1785 and covers from Berwick upon Tweed to Fife.
Contact: Rachel Elliott
Contact: Rachel Elliott
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Milly Frances
Email:Milly Frances
Safety in Numbers
Photographer: Milly Frances
Details: Cast acid dipped glass. Dimensions variable.
Contact: 077 4040 5185 - UK
Contact: 077 4040 5185
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Michèle Oberdieck
Email:Sylvain Deleu
Studies in Blue
Photographer: Sylvain Deleu
Details: from 31cm high (bowl) to 51cm high
free blown glass,left vessel using Graal technique
Contact: oberdieckm@gmail.com
Contact: oberdieckm@gmail.com
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Agelos Papadakis
Email:Agelos Papadakis
Like glass in the sea, still image from video.
Photographer: Agelos Papadakis
Details: Hot formed glass, video projection, variable dimentions, 2016
Like glass in the sea’ is a triptych composition that creates a narrative between glass, light and the moving image that explores the conceptual and visual interplay between those elements and their metaphorical meaning.
Full video on: http://www.agelospapadakis.com/
Artist:Phil Vickery
Email:Jo Howell
Distracted Thoughts
Photographer: Jo Howell
Details: Mould blown glass, cut and polished, and UV mounted on float glass.
Distracted Thoughts is a sculpture based on ADHD. Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder is a biological, brain-based condition that is characterized by poor attention and distractibility and/or hyperactive and impulsive behaviors. Distractibility, forgetfulness, frustrations, restlessness, isolation, difficulty organizing self, tendency to act or blurt out before thinking, difficulty maintaining long-term relationships- these are just a few of the issues individuals with ADHD.
Contact: philvickeryglass@hotmail.co.uk
Contact: philvickeryglass@hotmail.co.uk
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HEREArtist:Vikki Stacey
Email:Ester Segarra
Through any door or window?
Photographer: Ester Segarra photograph
Details: Three separate coloured cast glass pieces.
Representational houses with a door or windows to see in or through.
4x7.5x2; 6x3x3; 6x2x2.5 cms
Contact: Vikki Stacey; vikkistacey@uwclub.net; 07753226836
Contact: 07753226836
TAKE PART IN NEXT EXHIBITION HERE