Drawing on the past

Glass artist Mathieu Grodet has combined his love of drawing with several different glass techniques, most recently settling on the creation of murrine as a vehicle for his painstaking designs, many of which capture significant quotes and phrases. Linda Banks finds out more.

You have a background in drawing and illustration. What led you to start working with glass?

While I was studying illustration and drawing in the late 1990s, the world was shifting to digital, with computers in many homes. When I started working with glass, the trend was not to work with your hands but to go towards the new El Dorado – the tech revolution. So glass came into my life just when I was looking to escape from the digital ‘promised land’. Working with my hands to create objects seemed much more of an engaging, fun challenge and possible future for me as an artist. 

A detail of an enamelled glass goblet by Mathieu Grodet.

What glass techniques have you used and which do you prefer?

I began my journey by immersing myself in the hot shop to learn glass blowing. Initially, I created goblets using the Venetian technique. As I wanted to make them unique, I started to transform them with a Dremel tool, engraving them with my own original illustrations. 

Later I learned the enamel method of painting on various glass shapes and I was able to make my illustrations more fanciful and full of colour. While it gives an alternative way to express oneself on glass, the enamel technique can be time-consuming and technically difficult. The firing process can be stressful and mistakes are unfixable. In one instance, three months of work on one piece was botched after an issues with the firing. I haven’t worked with enamel since, but I will come back to it eventually, as it does give so much artistic space. 

‘Never and ever’ enamelled glass piece made at the Tacoma Museum of Glass in 2019.

In parallel with glass blowing, I learned flameworking. I quickly discovered it was far easier to put together a small flameworking studio than a hot shop and I began with beads and small sculptures.

‘Bankster’ is an example of one of Mathieu’s flameworked sculptures.

At Loren Stump’s Corning Museum of Glass workshop, I learned the ancient technique of murrine. When the pandemic hit, I finally had some time off from teaching to focus on flameworked murrine at home. Now I spend a lot of time in my studio focusing on this method.

 Glass blowing will always have a special place in my heart. Your entire body is needed to work the hot shop and I love the physicality of engaging with fire and water – it is playing with terrestrial forces – something bigger than us. 

However, now I am enjoying the art of murrine and its technical and strategic aspects. It is like building a house; you need to carefully plan every steps over weeks. It also involves other diverse techniques, such as cold working, marquetry and mosaic. I feel in uncharted territory on the murrine planet. It is like I can barely see in the dark and am going forward with a lamp torch. I don’t know where I am going and I love that. I feel like a researcher, an explorer and maybe I’ll discover treasures on the way.

‘La Déclaration des Droits de l’Homme et du Citoyen’ translates as the Declaration of Human Rights and was drawn up in 1789. Mathieu says that, while it is not perfect nor complete, he believes it is a powerful statement that needs to be heard again. He recreated it in mosaic style using over 17,500 letters composed from murrine tiles. Dark red was used to represent blood, with the ivory coloured background symbolising “the ivory tower that freedom has to be taken from”. The frame dates from the late 1800s. See the finished piece with the image of Mathieu at the bottom of this article.

What is your creative approach? Do you draw your ideas out or dive straight in with the materials?

I like to draw inspiration from many sources – I listen to French radio and podcasts and read new and classic books. I write down lyrics, quotes, conversations etc, and all is blended with sketches and drawings of ideas that I have in my notebooks. I keep coming back to the notebook as a safe line.

Over time, most of my illustration work has merged with my glass practice, with both feeding each other. I have many ideas and sketches in my notebook, and not all of them are good, so it can be difficult to select which idea to dive into next. I can spend weeks thinking about the next project. Lately, I am even using geometry tools, such as a protractor or compass, to be more accurate with the murrine – tools I used to consider too authoritarian and academic. 

These three images above show how Mathieu builds up each design in sections from the central part, adding more pieces around the outside each time.

What inspires your work?

I am inspired mainly by the past, especially objects – the older the better.

I am fascinated by thinking about people like us 1000 years ago and what they would be doing in their day-to-day lives. When I am in a museum, I think about the makers of the objects – why they created them and what the context was for those men and women to produce such work.

I like looking back to learn, to try to decipher patterns and modes. 

At the end of the day, we all talk about time and how we can try to hold on to it, don’t we? 

What message(s) do you want to convey through your art?

This is a big question but I hope my work inspires people to discover and question. 

In some of my latest work, I have actually relayed a lot of the messages of others through my work – from interesting thinkers and artists, like Percy Bysshe Shelley, Malcom X, Howard Zinn, David Bowie, George Orwell, Pussy Riot and Rousseau.

A quote from the poet Percy Shelley flameworked in 2021.

Text is a very effective way to carry a message and those people are far more talented with words than I am. It is also very comfortable and convenient for me to use their words to carry the old message of freedom.

‘Deus Sive Natura’ flameworking.

What is your favourite tool or piece of equipment and why?

The jacks tool. It looks simple but it is quite intricately designed and can be used in so many ways. It is so effective and means I can achieve an incredible range of shapes. It is like a blend of chopstick and sword. It gives level and leverage and is the ultimate guide – wise and always reliable. When applied to the rotating glass, it can feel like riding down a snow slope on skis.

Do you have a favourite piece you have made? Why is it your favourite?

I have a deep affection for a recent murrine I made with a Goethe sentence saying, ‘Nothing is worth more than this day’. It is in a round format and I think this is how to live and the circle is done. What else is there to say?

Where do you show and sell your work?

I show and sell my murrine work online through social media, as the pandemic pushed me to move online. I have some bigger work represented at the Sandra Ainsley Gallery in Toronto, Canada.

Mathieu’s illustrative skills are demonstrated in this enamelled plate from 2018.

What advice would you give to someone starting out on a career in glass?

I would say go and learn with the artists you love and learn their techniques. Another suggestion is to explore the networks to sell that type of work. It is also great to attend gatherings, conferences and other events in this small glass world; it is good to meet the players, as it is all about human contact.

Do you have a career highlight?

 I hope it is still to come. Also, when my glass doesn’t break.

Where is your glass practice heading next?

Though I am not completely certain, there is a mix of anxiety and excitement of going in the direction of murrine. I feel enough challenges have been raised with the murrine to keep me busy for a while. I hope to get back to the hot shop to use the murrine in conjunction with bigger pieces like bowls or goblets.

Is the global energy crisis affecting your practice?

With my oxygen concentrator, I produce the oxygen I need with a small amount of electricity. The use of propane is also fairly low with soft glass, so I am not that directly affected by the global energy crisis. That said, the glass factory in Venice that I buy my glass from is heavily affected. This may make the price of glass rise in the future. For me this is not good news, as making murrine uses a lot of glass.

And finally…

The history/story of murrine still needs to be written. It is an ancient way of producing images as the Egyptians did and it has been forgotten for too long. For those who have the time, it is a fascinating technique to explore. The possibilities are endless and, in a way, it is just the beginning of something very old. 

About the artist

Mathieu Grodet in front of his completed ‘Declaration of Human Rights’ murrine mosaic piece.

Mathieu Grodet is a glassblower, flameworker and illustrator born in Orleans, France. He lives and works at his studio in Killaloe, Canada, creating pieces that bring the past of glass together with themes of the present using traditional techniques with a modern twist. He marries and reconstructs form, function and design with the aim of creating a discussion.

Mathieu also lectures and teaches glassblowing, flameworking, and enamelling techniques. He has conducted workshops and demonstrations in China, Japan, Turkey, Ireland, Canada and the US.

His work is in private collections across Europe and North America and it can be seen at the Corning Museum of Glass and the Art Institute of Chicago.

Find out more via his website https://mathieugrodetglass.com/ or follow him on Instagram: @Mathieu_Grodet_Glass

Main feature image: A quotation from the 13th century mystic and poet Rumi created in murrine.

Historic stained glass window making joins Red List of Endangered Crafts

Stained glass window making (historic windows) has been added to the Heritage Crafts Association’s (HCA) Red List of Endangered Crafts 2023.

The British Society of Master Glass Painters (BSMGP) states that it has known for some time that the making of work on all scales was threatened, and particularly the design and making painted and leaded stained glass windows on a large scale for architectural settings.

Steve Clare, chairman of the BSMGP said, “Obviously there are mixed emotions on receiving the verdict from Heritage Crafts that this important strain of our craft is endangered. On one hand it confirms our view that, despite our efforts to encourage the next generation of artists and craftspeople to join, that we are now at dangerously low levels of professionals to protect the UK’s heritage of stained glass making. On the positive side, we hope that this announcement will allow the Society to shine a light on the problem and to galvanise others to help us create a renaissance in the use of stained glass and to therefore provide a future living for apprentices coming into the craft.”

The BSMGP provided HCA with data from various sources for the expert panel to consider (including surveys with the membership). The review focused on:

  • loss of skills
  • aging practitioners
  • the lack of opportunities for skilled makers to pass on their skills
  • the decline in educational opportunities and courses
  • the lack of training and employment opportunities with larger

companies

  • the scarcity and rising costs of raw materials
  • relevance in today’s world

Talking about the plans for creating a renaissance in the use of stained glass, Deborah Parkes a BSMGP council member and Head of Projects at the Society said, “In 2023, stained glass is seen by so many as an art of a bygone era … for churches or doors in Victorian properties. My job therefore is to inspire homeowners as well as professional specifiers (architects and interior designers) to look again at its potential. The vision is for a virtuous circle – a renaissance in stained glass will create more demand for the skills of artists and associated craftspeople, allowing the dwindling number of accredited professionals to take on apprentices and encourage more young people to enrol on courses.”

Why has stained glass making been given endangered craft status?

The HCA notes that skills in designing and cartooning for stained glass in historic buildings take time to develop and traditionally these skills are passed from master to apprentice or teacher to student over years. There are specific challenges in designing for traditional windows, such as: how light interacts with the architecture; choice of lead sizes (for structure and aesthetics); the quantity and quality of paint used to filter the light; designing windows that use the shapes of the glass pieces and position of tie-bars to maximise the physical strength of a window constructed with lead. Removing and installing new and historic leaded panels in large stone windows requires specialist skills in stone and metalwork. There are only a handful of studios left in the UK capable of this highly specialised work.

One issue affecting the survival of such stained glass projects – and other crafts on the endangered list – is the contraction in supplies and suppliers. While the HCA states that mouth-blown flat glass has become ‘extinct in the UK’ after English Antique Glass stopped production in 2022 when it moved from Birmingham to Oxfordshire, as readers of the CGS Glass Network May 2023 print edition will know, English Antique Glass remains in business and has large stocks of this glass available.

Hettie Bowles, Operations Director at English Antique Glass, confirmed that the company is still providing other glass products to consumers and glass materials to the trade, including Norman Slabs, Bullions and other blown glass work. She stated that the company retains the skills and knowledge to restart flat glass production in the future.

In addition, our Glass Network cover story features John Reyntiens MBE, whose architectural stained glass business continues to find success with commissions like the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee Window of 2022 and two windows installed in Speaker’s House at the Palace of Westminster in time for the coronation of King Charles III in May 2023.

CGS members can read the digital edition of Glass Network magazine via the Members’ Area in the Resources section of the website.

Read more about the HCA’s Red List of Endangered Crafts 2023 here.

Find out more about the BSMGP via the website.

Image: Working on a stained glass window. Photo: BSMGP.

International Festival of Glass and British Glass Biennale seek new organisers

August 2024 will see the International Festival of Glass celebrating its 20th anniversary with its 10th biennial gathering in Stourbridge, West Midlands.

However, the organisers have announced that this will be the last Festival organised by the Ruskin Mill Land Trust (RMLT). Festival Director Janine Christley and the RMLT Trustees have regretfully decided that they are longer able to commit the considerable time and attention needed to put on the Festival and the British Glass Biennale exhibition.

Janine explains, “Our focus must be on our primary charitable aim, working with young people with learning difficulties. We will continue promoting and supporting the glass community at The Glasshouse, with the research and development of glass made specifically for therapeutic use, a new dedicated gallery for the Ruskin Glass Collection and smaller glass-related events and exhibitions.”

However, she hopes this decision will not mark the end of these major events in the contemporary glass calendar. “We would welcome interest from any organisation or consortium who may be prepared to consider taking over the International Festival of Glass and/or the British Glass Biennale and would work with them on a handover after the next festival in August 2024,” she continues.

This decision does not jeopardise the 2024 event, which will take place as usual from 23-26 August 2024 in the Stourbridge Glass Quarter. The call for entries to the 2024 British Glass Biennale and the International Bead Biennale will be announced in autumn 2023, so start planning what you will submit for the final exhibition to be hosted by the RMLT.

If there is something you have always wanted to see or do in the Festival, email the organisers on ifg@rmlt.org.uk. And if you are interested in taking these events on beyond 2024, do contact them on the same email address.

www.ifg.org.uk

Image: View of the 2022 British Glass Biennale exhibition.

Society of Glass Technology annual conference call for papers

The theme of the Society of Glass Technology’s (SGT) 2023 annual conference is Sustainability in Glass. The organisers are calling for prospective presenters to send abstracts by 15 June 2023.

The SGT conference takes place in Cambridge, UK, from 4-6 September 2023.

A History and Heritage themed session will span two days, starting at 12.30pm on 5 September until 2pm on 6 September (including lunch on both days). It is hoped to have a hybrid event, with online participation by an international audience.

SGT states: “We invite delegates to join us in exploring the lively and diverse, present and future possibilities for communicating glass in all its forms through art, craft and design, history, research and education. Keynote lecturers are being approached, but presentations from students, artists, researchers and academics in the field, based around the following and any related themes, are warmly encouraged.”

Day 1: Tuesday 5 September 12.30-5pm

The proposed focus is on Glass Knowledge acquisition and transmission: through word of mouth, in-house training, literature, craft and trade bodies and, latterly, formal education, covering both practical and technical elements of glass teaching. National glass collections, publications and library resources, academic research and reconstructive modelling, glass displays, online resources and international links are all legitimate topics.

Day 2: Wednesday 6 September 9am-12.30pm

Focusing on glass arts, crafts and design, including the development of practical glass making; the preservation and safeguarding of historical glass skills promoted through UNESCO special status; town twinning projects, national and international glass prizes and funding to support glass practitioners.

The event will be divided into four themed sessions, two each day, each offering one 40-minute slot on a keynote topic and two 20-minute talks for more focused presentations by students or emerging research speakers.

It is hoped to offer opportunities for round table discussions and cross-fertilisation between those attending the different conference sessions.

To present, please submit a 250-word abstract online or email it with your contact details and keywords to: Christine@sgt.org by 15 June 2023.

Following successful admission to the conference, SGT will invite submission of papers for publication (3000-4000 words).

Conference fees for delegates and presenters, including tea, coffee and lunch breaks are:

2 days Full Price Standard £95

1 day Full Price Standard £50

2 days Student £75

1 day Student £40.

The conference banquet on the evening of 5 September takes place at Corpus Christi College and is £70 per person.

On-site accommodation is available at Murray Edwards College, University of Cambridge, Huntingdon Road, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, CB3 0DF.

For more information and to book visit: https://sgt.org/mpage/SGTAnnualConference1

Image: Murray Edwards College, Cambridge.

Museum of Glass exhibition designed to engage children with glass

The US-based Museum of Glass has launched a glass exhibition with opportunities alongside each exhibit for children to create, move and play. The show, ‘Illuminate: Glass Art for Early Learners’, is on now until Spring 2024.

Illuminate is an exhibition for kids and their grown-ups that explores what makes glass a unique art material – the ability to capture and manipulate light. Visitors can create their own design with a large, illuminated peg board, make art from shadows, and discover what makes glass glow in the dark.

Museum curator Katie Buckingham commented, “The most important part of early learning is that it is fuelled by exploring together. As someone who became a parent during the pandemic, I relish opportunities to be out exploring the world with my own toddler. It is such a privilege to look at the Museum’s collection from this perspective. Glass might seem too fragile for early learners, but its ability to work with light opens space for all ages to learn about the world around them. I hope that this exhibition is a space where visitors of all ages, especially kids, can experience glass and be creative.”

The exhibition will unfold through artworks created by Dan Bancila, Heike Brachlow, Dale Chihuly, Nikola Dimitrijevic, Etsuko Ichikawa, John Kiley, Dominick Labino, Flora C Mace, Richard Royal, Lisabeth Sterling, Susan Stinsmuehlen-Amend, Meredith Wenzel, Veruska Vagen, František Vizner and more.

“While glass is fine art, and delicate, it can also be an invaluable teaching medium for early learners and their families,” said Museum of Glass executive director Debbie Lenk.

The Illuminate exhibition has been developed in consultation with Alysia Jines, programme manager at non-profit Greentrike for the Children’s Museum of Tacoma. In partnership with the Museum of Glass, the Children’s Museum of Tacoma will display a temporary exhibition featuring artwork from the Museum of Glass Kids Design Glass programme for the duration of Illuminate.

Children’s Museum child visitors can submit drawings for Kids Design Glass consideration. On 28 October 2023, the Museum of Glass hot shop team will blow a piece inspired by one of these drawings.

The Museum of Glass is at: 1801 Dock Street, Tacoma, WA 98402, USA. Find out more via the website.

Image: Susan Stinsmuehlen-Amend’s ‘Pro Rata Lyricism’ features handblown roundels, etched glass, lead fabrication with overlays and metals in an ash frame. It is part of the collection of the Museum of Glass (gift of David Huchthausen). Photo courtesy of the artist.

Material encounters: the Ireland Glass Biennale exhibition 2023

Dr Anna Moran delves into the work and inspirations of the artists in this show, on until 20 August 2023 at Dublin Castle. Dr Moran lectures on the history of craft and design at the National College of Art and Design, Dublin.

Since its inception in 2017, the Ireland Glass Biennale (IGB) has developed into a key event in the international glass calendar. Following the traditional biennale format, IGB 2023 has been curated following an open call during which 51artists were selected from over 200 submissions by an international jury. Each bringing expertise from their respective worlds of commercial galleries, museums, glass education and practice, the IGB 2023 jury comprised Katya Heller, Director at Heller Gallery, New York; Zhang Lin, founder and president of the Shanghai Museum of Glass; Kim Mawhinney, Senior Curator of Art at National Museums Northern Ireland, and Irish artist and educator, Karen Donnellan.

Bringing together makers from Europe, the Middle East, Asia, and North and South America – including both established and emerging talent – the incredible range of creative output stemming from artists working with glass can be sensed at this large show. Film- and performance-based work and wall-hung neon pieces are presented alongside large scale installations and smaller works made using glass as well as found objects and mixed media. Led by Dr Caroline Madden, lecturer in glass at the National College of Art and Design, Dublin, IGB is part of a much larger Creative Europe funded project, ‘Imagining Sustainable Glass Network Europe’ (ISGNE), which has worked towards creating connections between glass schools and studios across Europe, funding training for glassmakers, highlighting glass making skill as part of our intangible heritage and presenting biennales such as this one.

Underpinning much of the work on display is purposeful and meaningful engagement with the materiality of glass. Its transparency, ductility and fragility, combined with its seemingly contradictory qualities of strength, solidity and hardness, form a context for experimentation and a rich seam of exploration for many of the makers represented. The Northern Ireland-based artist, Helen Hancock, is one such maker. She explores what happens when glass is infused with breastmilk, umbilical cords, milk teeth or ashes, telling us that milk teeth create an extraordinary bloom of gold colour when saturated into glass, while breast-milk creates a web-like pattern of white threads, which is ‘unique each time’ (IGB Catalogue, 2023, p58). Drawing on her other role as a breastfeeding counsellor, her glass practice is focused on women’s experiences, and their stories of trauma in particular. Using these intensely resonant glass materials, Hancock makes very personal pieces, informed by the private, healing dialogue between her and the women she has worked with.

Helen Hancock’s ‘Nature does not Bloom in Private’ (2022) is made from breast milk infused into molten glass. Photo by the artist.

For Irish artist Laura Quinn, it is the interface between people and glass that has provided a guiding focus. Informed by Michael Polanyi’s writings on tacit knowledge, Quinn urges observers to explore the ‘silent knowledge of the material’ through sight and touch, provoking and welcoming human engagement (IGB Catalogue, 2023, p92). The pieces Haptic Bellows I & II each feature over 150 individually lampworked leaf-like and spiked forms embedded in a silicone membrane, which encourage the viewer to reach out and touch, all the while inviting reflection on the nature of glass and its ability to withstand such contact.

Laura Quinn’s ‘Haptic Bellows I & II’ comprise blown and cut and polished glass. Photo: Sylvain Deleu.

A very different approach to the materiality of glass is seen in the work of German-born Seattle-based Anna Mlasowsky. With a keen awareness of the ways in which glass exists across a spectrum of physical states – solid, fluid, transparent and ‘unyieldingly hard yet precariously fragile’ – Mlasoswky creates glass objects which are used or ‘activated’ in her video- and performance-based work (IGB Catalogue, 2023, p82). In performances such as 4 Feet Apart and On * Venus, the material properties of glass are used thought provokingly as a mediator through which to navigate ideas around womanhood, otherness, queerness, unbelonging and disobedience. Video of 4 Feet Apart available via this link.

Anna Mlasowsky’s ‘4 Feet Apart’ is a 20-minute performance by Lilia Ossiek and Alba Maria Thomas Alvarez. Camera: Sebastian Knorr and Bernhard Kübel.

The intrinsic characteristics of glass, particularly its fragility and transparency, are also used creatively in the work of Dutch-based Krista Israel. Using glass lampworking techniques, in combination with other materials, such as porcelain and found objects, Israel’s work conveys ideas around wellbeing and seeks to further probe, in her own words, ‘the existential experience of contemporary society’ (IGB Catalogue, 2023, p66). An ironic humour pervades her piece, Without Title II, which both draws in and intrigues, challenging the viewer to contemplate the pose and gilded palms of the toy-like figure on its knees.

Krista Israel’s ‘Without Title II’ is made from mixed media, glass, porcelain and 23ct gold. Photo by the artist.

A deep and intuitive connection between the maker and their material comes to the fore in many of the works on display, each resonant of the patient, skilled work required in their making. In a world which is increasingly uncertain and precarious, London-based artist Sarah Wiberley finds a ‘fleeting sense of control’ in the execution of time-consuming, traditional techniques (IGB Catalogue, 2023, p120). Underscored by an innate understanding of colour, Wiberley’s precise patterning evokes a welcome sense of calmness and order.

Sarah Wiberley’s ‘Spinning-Around’ (2020).comprises blown, carved glass.  Photo: Agata Pec.

For French artist Valérie Rey, the painstaking processes involved in adorning rescued pieces of nature that she feels are forgotten and undervalued – such as fallen trees, fungi, walnut shells – are therapeutically meditative. Rey describes the application of gold leaf as ‘sensual’, while there is a calming, contemplative quality to the repetition involved in forming and shaping hundreds of glass beads ‘like tiny beings, similar but in reality all different and once assembled, form a colony, a people’ (IGB Catalogue, 2023). See main feature image.

Carrie Fertig’s video performance ‘Plummet’ features glass and mixed media. Photo: Rob Page.

Precariousness – whether in relation to the environment or a broader sense of social uncertainty –  exists as an undercurrent in many of the works on display. For Carrie Fertig, an artist based in Scotland, the climate crisis looms in the form of a large plumb bob comprised of thousands of hanging glass icicles. Her video performance, entitled Plummet, shows the unwieldy plumb bob, symbolic of melting ice, tethered awkwardly to the artist. When the artist moves, this causes the plumb bob to swing dangerously, the icicles clashing into each other, ringing a loud roar denoting an ending, ‘as inescapable as the consequences of our behaviour’ (IGB Catalogue, 2023, p52). Importantly, each of the icicles used in Plummet has been recycled, having been used in previous performances by Fertig.

Reusing glass is a practice also seen in the work of other artists exhibiting at IGB 2023, such as Czech artist Michaela Spruzinova, who recycles various pieces of glass in the creation of her work, and American-Austrian artist Rebecca Tanda, who reworks car window glass into organic forms.

Taking all of the work shown at this large group show into consideration, a commonality that arises is a rich and meaningful engagement with the materiality of glass. Closer examination rewards the observer, whether it is Hancock’s breast-milk infused glass or the tender coat of lampworked glass that envelops Israel’s figurative piece, the mesmerising beaded surface of Rey’s fungi or the dense forest of leaf-like forms on Quinn’s sculptural forms that call out to be touched. It is there you will sense the incredible process of correspondence – the back and forth between the maker and their material – creating an intuitive, innate connection that is palpable in each and every piece in this important exhibition.

The Irish Glass Biennale 2023 exhibition is open to the public from 28 April until 20 August 2023 at the Coach House Gallery, Dublin Castle, Ireland. Free Admission. Find out more via the website.

Dr Anna Moran

Main feature image: Valérie Rey’s ‘Respect’ is made from glass and wood. Photo by the artist.

Bordering on the Herbaceous glass exhibition launched

The latest Contemporary Glass Society (CGS) online exhibition features the themes of summer and flowers and is live now on the CGS website. Twenty glass artists are represented and they have used a wide range of techniques to create a diverse range of styles and subjects.

Some of the works are for sale direct from the artists, who were invited to share the pieces that they created for decorating garden borders or acting as a sculptural focal point. They are designed and made specifically for the great outdoors.

From elaborate mosaic spheres to bold arrows of cast glass to delicately formed fused glass lilies, there is something to suit all preferences and scales.

View all the artworks and find out full details of each one here.

This exhibition is live until 2 July 2023.

Image: ‘Cactus Garden’ is made from recycled and repurposed glass that has been fused, cold worked and bonded by the artist Marc Fresko.

Join next CGS glass Discovery Day at The Hepworth Wakefield

Do you want to find out more about contemporary glass? All are welcome at the next Contemporary Glass Society (CGS) Discovery Day, where glass artists will talk about their processes and inspirations.

Organised by CGS, the next in this series of Discovery Days taking place around the country during 2023 will be held at impressive art gallery The Hepworth Wakefield on Saturday 17 June 2023.

Come to West Yorkshire to meet an amazing melange of glass artists talking about their work and lives as contemporary glass artists. You will have the opportunity to interact with professional creatives and to find out more about the creative industries. Meet and make new contacts with glass artists local to you.

The four fascinating speakers are both established artists and young emerging makers. One of these speakers is an international artist, joining the day virtually by Zoom. CGS is bringing some of the best of the world’s contemporary glass artists to Wakefield to excite and inspire everyone.

The speakers are:

  • Joanna Manousis, a British–American artist working in glass and mixed media sculpture
  • David Reekie, an internationally renowned glass artist specialising in lost wax cast glass who reflects on the human condition
  • Jahday Ford, a glass artist and designer from Bermuda but based in Manchester, who specialises in hot glass fabrication and mould design
  • Kristiina Uslar, a glass artist from Estonia who works mainly in pâte de verre.

This Discovery Day in Wakefield includes exploring the beautiful Hepworth Wakefield gallery inside, as well as the garden designed by Tom Stuart-Smith.

Glass artists attending are welcome to take part in a ‘Show and Tell’ session, bringing along a piece of their work and explaining the techniques and ideas behind it.

A Discovery Day offers participants the chance to explore the collaboration between heritage crafts and modern technology and to appreciate the value of glass not only as an artistic material but also its technical, scientific, historical and geographical importance.

Tickets cost £45 + booking fee (Early Bird price of £35 + booking fee available until 14 May 2023), which includes all the day’s events, refreshments and lunch. Tickets can be purchased via Eventbrite here.

The Hepworth Wakefield is at Gallery Walk, Wakefield, West Yorkshire, WF1 5AW. Website: https://hepworthwakefield.org

This Discovery Day is sponsored by the Worshipful Company of Glass Sellers Charity Fund, the Glass Manufacturers Educational Trust and Pearsons Glass.

Image: Some of the speakers for the Hepworth Wakefield Discovery Day and examples of their artwork.

Caithness Glass exhibition in Inverness

Inverness Museum and Art Gallery will be celebrating the history of Caithness Glass with an exhibition of pieces donated by glass collector Dr Graham Cooley, opening in June 2023.

Over 350 items have been generously donated to the museum from the Graham Cooley Collection, most of which will be on display. From vases and bowls to thimbles and candlesticks, the range of goods designed and made by the company is impressive.

The first Caithness Glass factory opened in Wick, Caithness, in 1961. The aim was to provide much needed skilled employment opportunities and create a product that could be sold around the world.

The early designs by Domhnall ÓBroin showed a strong Scandinavian influence, with colours inspired by Highland landscapes. ÓBroin was followed by Colin Terris and other designers, who introduced more colours and patterns.

The products were popular and the company grew, establishing new factories in Oban in 1969, and Perth in 1979. In 1988 it took over the Wedgwood Crystal factory in King’s Lynn, Norfolk.

However, by 2004, the company could no longer compete with cheap imports and rising production costs. It was bought out of receivership by Edinburgh Crystal but went back into receivership in 2006. This time it was bought by Dartington Crystal, based in Devon. Sadly, all of the original factories have closed, but the Caithness brand is still owned by Dartington and operates from the Crieff Visitor Centre in Perthshire.

Graham Cooley is a 20th century art collector based in England. His collection is focused on the company’s art glass and tableware, rather than the paperweights which have become synonymous with the Caithness brand.

Alongside the exhibition, the book Caithness Glass: Loch, Heather & Peat, written by collectables expert and TV personality, Mark Hill, will be available to buy from the museum’s gift shop, along with some vintage pieces of Caithness Glass.

Most of the collection will be displayed in the Inverness Museum’s Foyer Gallery from 17 June to 19 September 2023.

Inverness Museum and Art Gallery is at Castle Wynd, Inverness, Highland, IV2 3EB, Scotland. Find out more via the website.

Image: Range of vases by Caithness Glass, designed by Domhnall ÓBroin in the 1960s.

Glasmuseet Ebeltoft changes name to Glas

Denmark’s Glasmuseet Ebeltoft opens its doors on 29 April 2023 with a new name and a new visual identity, following redecoration of the museum.

The museum of international glass art had been known as Glasmuseet Ebeltoft since 1986. Now, it will be called Glas with the subtitle ‘Museum of Glass Art’.

The name change marks the first step on the way to an ambitious, strategic development of the museum. Behind the new name lies a desire to sharpen the profile and clearly signal the core of the museum’s work: glass and the exploration of the material’s properties in an artistic context. It is about the unique qualities of glass, from liquid to solid, from hot to cold, the sensuality of the material, transparency, optics, colours, but also about building a bridge towards a wider art scene with glass as a point of departure.

“We must be a living and relevant museum for both the professionally interested glass enthusiasts and for visitors who are on holiday in the area and experience glass art for the first time,” explained the museum’s director Mikkel Hammer Elming.

“We want to share our interest and passion for glass with as many people as possible and create meaningful encounters with art. We see an increasing interest in glass in contemporary art. The exhibition with the artist duo Studio ThinkingHand will be a perfect example of how we want to explore glass as an artistic material in the future, and how we want to work on introducing glass to new contemporary artists.”

The museum’s glass studio plays an important role in the future development of Glas. It is the centre of a present and sensual communication that also includes the heat from the furnaces, the smell of burnt wood and the sound of the tools. And this is often where the fascination with the material begins.

The new logo reflects the sensuality of the glass in the ‘a’, which is soft and ‘liquid’ like hot glass. And the optical qualities of the glass appear like a lens that gives a view into the world of glass, on the new website, which launches at the same time as the new name.

Visitors will also experience changes in the physical layout of the museum, which has a revamped reception area and new shop.

The museum’s new visual identity and website have been developed in collaboration with the design and branding agency Stupid Studio.

The ‘Evolutions’ exhibition by Studio ThinkingHand opens on 29 April 2023 and runs until 7 January 2024.

The rebranding is supported by Syddjurs Municipality, The Beckett Foundation, The New Carlsberg Foundation Dinesen, Kvadrat, plus VisitAarhus/The Business Promotion Board.

The Obelske Family Fund supports the museum’s 2023 exhibition programme.

Website: https://www.glaskunst.dk