One of the evening highlights for visitors to this year’s International Festival of Glass will be a Korean themed fashion show, entitled ‘Hot Hanbok/Cool Glass’, on 27 August 2022.
A total of 35 glass artists from seven countries have created wearable glass creations, inspired by traditional and contemporary Korean Hanbok (clothing). These pieces will be paired with the Korean fashion in 30 ‘looks’ to be shown off on the catwalk. A highlight will be detailed, traditional King and Queen costumes, accessorised with giant lampworked glass crowns by South Korean glass artist Eunsuh Choi.
The models will walk to the beat of a specially commissioned Korean DJ soundtrack by composer and sound producer, Jun Seok Kim. The show will feature traditional Hanbok, curated by the Korean Cultural Centre UK, alongside new, contemporary designers, including the brands ‘London Hanbok’ and Seoul-based ‘Danha’, famous for dressing K-Pop group Blackpink.
Danha have sustainability at the heart of what they do and a number of the invited artists are similarly aligned to this sustainable way of production, recycling and repurposing to make their creations. Award-winning Costa Rican artist Juli Bolaňos-Durman, now living in Edinburgh, has worked with recycled components, including found glass from the community, for her elaborate, wearable sculpture. Meanwhile, Helen Pailing has created a headpiece and shoulder piece using salvaged Boroscilicate glass (pulled point remnants) and salvaged window blinds.
The evening will also feature classical and Korean music from The Kasper Trio and a contemporary dance performance, Un-Tact, choreographed by Yenn Dance.
There are just 200 tickets available for this unique fashion and music show, which takes place on Saturday 27 August at 7pm at the Glasshouse Arts Centre (located at the Ruskin Glass Centre, The Glasshouse, Wollaston Road, Amblecote, Stourbridge, West Midlands, DY8 4HF). For more information and to book visit: www.ifg.org.uk/events
The International Festival of Glass 2022 opens on Friday 26 August, welcoming visitors to sites across the historic Stourbridge Glass Quarter and in Wolverhampton. These include the Ruskin Glass Centre, the Red House Glass Cone, and the Stourbridge Glass Museum.
The full, four-day Festival schedule (26-29 August 2022) can be viewed on the website www.ifg.org.uk/schedule and promises a host of demonstrations, lectures, performances, exhibitions and workshops. The exhibitions are open longer, from 26 August-1 October 2022.
Images (left to right): Rose Thistle Sleeve by Ayako Tani (photo: Simon Bruntnell); Contemporary Hanbok by Danha; detail of Dragon Shield by Opal Seabrook.
Stained glass artist and a singer Pinkie Maclure believes stained glass today should revive the narrative qualities of previous centuries, but reflect the dark humour of the world today. Here she explains her journey in glass.
I first learned the basics of stained glass when a friend asked me to help do some repairs. I became interested in the narrative possibilities of stained glass and bought a book on glass painting. After many near misses with kilns and sandblasters, I have slowly learnt to make quite complex and satisfying work.
I want stained glass to be a contemporary art form in its own right, rather than it always being secondary to architecture, religion or interior design. Although I do sometimes make large architectural windows, I find that making light boxes, to be displayed on a wall like glowing paintings, allows me greater artistic freedom, intimacy and spontaneity.
When it comes to techniques, I work with both copper foil and lead, and use painting, layering, engraving, sandblasting and mixed media, such as feathers, newspaper and beads. I make a rough digital collage first as a guide and then add more ideas as I make the actual piece. I like the slowness of the handmade process, because it allows me access to my subconscious and, as I work, ideas seem to come from nowhere. I use a lot of scrap glass and oddments from other windows, because I like that element of chaos found in windows that have been repaired many times.
Exhibitions
My first show was with an organisation called Outside In, in 2015. They work with artists who are creating outside the art school network. There is a stigma that goes with being self-taught, which made it difficult for me to exhibit at first. They gave me my first opportunity to exhibit nationally, and that led to my work being shown in the National Museum of Scotland ‘Art of Glass’ exhibition and the Outsider Art Fair in New York. The National Museum of Scotland then purchased my piece ‘Self-Portrait Dreaming of Portavadie’ in 2020.
‘Self-Portrait Dreaming of Portavadie’ was purchased by the National Museum of Scotland in 2020.
Ultimately, my goal is to make beautiful work with which to seduce the eye, but crucially, I want to deal with contemporary subject matter, emptying my head of its fears and frustrations by telling darkly humorous stories about the world we find ourselves in.
My work is heavily influenced by the curious and wonderful windows in cathedrals such as Chartres and York, with their extraordinary imagery and astonishing narrative power. I particularly like the small, intimate pieces tucked away in unexpected places; they draw you in and often have a timeless quality. They’re often very strange or funny, whether by design or not. In my own work, I sometimes include odd characters or creatures from medieval art, dropping them in as commentators on 21st-century events. I believe our present is haunted by our past and we have more in common with our ancestors than we know.
I enjoy the cracked, fragmented nature of stained glass resulting from decades of repairs. It reflects how many of us feel today and it gives a strange poignancy to the work. The subject matter of my light boxes ranges from the darkly comical to the most serious of issues, such as addiction, lockdown, insomnia and climate change.
I showed two pieces of my work at Collect, London, with North Lands Creative, in February 2022. They were both ‘Tree of Life’ pieces. The tree is a symbol I use a lot in my work. It’s found in so may different religions and myths and now it has become a potent symbol of the battle against climate change. Being supporters of so much life, trees are also an endless source of beauty and I love hiding tiny insects and birds within their layers. In my ‘Tree of Life and Death Scenarios’ I included fungi, as they are crucial to tree networks, but also human hands, to symbolise our dependence upon, and our careless destruction of, forests. At the bottom of the piece there are tiny human figures clinging desperately to the branches.
‘Tree of Life and Death Scenarios’.
The smaller piece, ‘Exit Tree’, uses a ladder (commonly used to symbolise Christ’s ascension) to symbolise humans abandoning the planet. Below them is a long-forgotten picnic table, which is now being occupied by frogs and birds in a post-human world. In the centre of the tree is a rusty old satellite dish containing a dove in its nest.
‘Exit Tree’.
In 2020, I won the John Byrne Award for Skill and Artistry for my piece ‘Pills for Ills, Ills for Pills’ (see main feature image), which is still one of my favourite pieces. Entirely made in blue and red, it’s a protest against the increasing prescribing of opiates by the NHS. Addiction to these painkillers has become a huge problem in the US, as they lose their effect and people are forced to consume larger and larger amounts. My piece shows two people tumbling helplessly into addiction, with a conveyor belt of pills falling into their mouths, while the spectral skull of addiction grins in the background. They’re surrounded by opium poppies – beautiful, but deadly.
Detail of ‘Pills for Ills, Ills for Pills’, which shows Pinkie Maclure’s skills as a glass painter.
I was lucky to be very busy with work during lockdown, because I received funding from Creative Scotland to make work for an exhibition at An Tobar Arts Centre on Mull, which eventually took place in Autumn 2021. An Tobar also commissioned me to make a COVID-19-related piece to be permanently installed in the building. The piece I made is of a mother and daughter reaching out to one another via headsets, surrounded by lost keys and tangled wires pulling a big red heart in two. The heart shape felt like a bit of a cliché, but somehow the mother and daughter thing made it work. I was unable to see my elderly mum for a long time and we never saw one another’s unmasked faces in the three years before she died, so this seemed an appropriate image and the title is simply ‘I Miss my Mum’.
‘I Miss My Mum’ was made for An Tobar Arts Centre on Mull.
During lockdown, I also made a piece for the Sequested Prize, which was a self-portrait prize created for artists during lockdown and judged by a prestigious panel of judges, including the director of the National Portrait Gallery. I was delighted to be one of the 15 winners. Working on stained glass got me through this terrible period, when, like most of us, my mental health was suffering. The piece I made is called ‘Totally Wired – Self-Portrait with Insomnia Posy’. The plants I’m clutching are all supposed to be sleep remedies, but of course, in extreme cases, they don’t work. The tiny stars in the sky behind me are actually hands waving, representing distant friends and family.
‘Totally Wired – Self-Portrait with Insomnia Posy’.The fine details of fingers, lace and sleep-inducing flowers in ‘Totally Wired – Self-Portrait with Insomnia Posy’.
I also have two pieces in the quite radical touring exhibition ‘We are Commoners’ with Craftspace. It explores the contemporary commons movement and can be seen in Hull Library until September and Colchester Minories after that.
In November I’m giving a talk about my work at the National Museum of Scotland and I also have a piece going into a group show in Whitechapel, London.
I’m currently working on an idea for a sound installation and live performance with stained glass as an important element. I was a singer long before I found glass and I’ve recorded 10 albums. I co-created a multimedia show called ‘Song Noir’ for Edinburgh Fringe in 2015, which toured to London and Germany, but it was exhausting, so I took a break to focus solely on stained glass.
Now I miss the sound and performance element, so it’s just a matter of putting the work in and then finding the right venue. I’ve been wanting to find a way to pull together all these disparate skills for a very long time. It’s an exciting prospect!
Pinkie Maclure in her Scottish glass studio.
About the artist Pinkie Maclure is an installation artist specialising in stained glass and voice work.
The powerful, narrative role of stained glass was largely lost in the 20th century and Pinkie seeks to reverse this by making intimate light boxes, like glowing paintings, with contemporary narratives. Using a multitude of techniques, including engraving, painting and layering, she creates poignant, darkly humorous vignettes full of symbolism, which explore her personal demons as well as the big issues of today.
She has won a number of prizes and her work has been acquired by the National Museum of Scotland. In November she is giving a talk there and for 2023 she is developing an installation using stained glass and ambisonic sound.
Find out more via Pinkie Maclure’s website: www.pinkiemaclure.net and follow her on Instagram @pinkie.maclure . You can also watch a film about her and her stained glass on the National Museums Scotland website via this link.
Main feature image:‘Pills for Ills, Ills for Pills’, which won the John Byrne Award for Skill and Artistry.
A new event showcasing contemporary glass is looking for exhibitors. This inaugural Festival of Glass will be held in Devizes, Wiltshire, UK, in November 2022.
The venue for the exhibition is the Norman church St Mary Devizes, which is being redeveloped as an arts and community hub for the Devzies and central Wiltshire area.
All glassmakers, based locally and farther afield, are invited to take part and sell their artworks in glass. The organisers, St Mary Devizes Trust, are hoping to attract a wide range of makers.
The Festival of Glass will take place from 3 to 5 November 2022, with a private view from 6-8pm on 3 November. The show will be open to the public from 10am-5pm on 4 and 5 November.
St Mary Devizes Trust will invite guests to the private view evening, and exhibitors will be encouraged to invite their own guests too.
If you are interested in exhibiting, please use the following Jotform link (you may have to create an account and password).
If you have any questions please email Edward at: ejtw@aol.com
Do you have an old glass item that you made many years ago, gathering dust in your studio or languishing at the back of your garage? More importantly, would you consider letting it go for a great cause? Stourbridge Glass Museum (SGM) is launching a new fundraising idea called ‘Something Old for Something New’.
The plan is to auction off your old glass donations to raise funds for the new SGM. The auctioneer will be ‘Antiques Roadshow’ TV show presenter Will Farmer, who is also one of SGM’s trustees, and director of Fieldings Auctioneers in Stourbridge, West Midlands.
Lynn Boleyn of SGM says, “If you could find an old friend that you’d be happy to donate we’d be thrilled, especially if there is a story behind it that we could share. We don’t want you to make anything new; with a green agenda, we aim to help glass artists and the new museum.”
Will Farmer has agreed to auction any donations free of charge and with no reserve, meaning items will be accessible to everyone, with all funds raised going to the museum.
When you wrap your piece for delivery, please include a short note about the piece you are donating, and Will Farmer will include this in the auction catalogue.
You can deliver your item to Fieldings Auctioneers (Mill Race Lane, Stourbridge, DY8 1JN), or to the SGM (High Street, Wordsley, DY8 4FB) during the International Festival of Glass/Biennale. The donations will be put on display at the museum’s VIP Royal opening on 14 September 2022, prior to the auction in October 2022.
For further information, contact Will Farmer at Fieldings (Tel: 01384 444140), or Lynn Boleyn at SGM (Tel: 01384 900447; email bgf@britishglassfoundation.org.uk).
North Lands Creative’s ‘Glass, Meet the Future’ (GMTF) film festival will return for a third time in January 2023. Applications are now open for films and ‘festival-responsive commission’ works.
The festival showcases international, diverse and engaging short films which feature glass. This latest event takes place from 7 to 28 January 2023 and is presented with a new partner, the Shanghai Museum of Glass.
Films
For the film entries, the organisers are looking for applications from female-identified and non-binary filmmakers using the mediums of glass and film. Films can be anything from a few seconds long to a maximum of 15 minutes, although a maximum of 10 minutes is preferred. The selected films will be shown on the festival’s online platform. Artists can also submit the work to be shown for the in-venue screenings at the Shanghai Museum of Glass and North Lands Creative (subject to curatorial approval).
Deadline for film applications: 3 October 2022.
Festival-responsive commissions
In addition, North Lands Creative and Shanghai Museum of Glass are offering commission opportunities for makers to create new, festival-responsive work or associated programming that clearly responds to the use of the medium of glass. Proposals can be for any amount from £200 up to £3000 (to include all artist fees, materials, and costs to deliver the commission proposal). The organisers expect to commission work across a range of contexts, concepts and costs.
Deadline for these applications: 12 September 2022.
As well as the partnership with the Shanghai Museum of Glass, the GMTF film festival is also supported by Creative Scotland.
North Lands Creative is based in Caithness, Scotland. It is focused on contemporary glass and committed to developing glass in the UK. Through the Alastair Pilkington Studio and Gallery, North Lands Creative facilitates and supports professional artists to make new artwork. It also offers talks, events and education activities around the studio and gallery to engage visitors with artists and making.
Full information and application guidelines for the GMTF film festival are available via this link on the North Lands Creative website.
Twenty of the UK’s leading glass artists have come together to make new and exciting glasswork to be featured in an exhibition called ‘Collaborations’ at Wolverhampton Art Gallery.
The event is part of the International Festival of Glass 2022 and runs from 20 August to 23 October 2022, with a Private View on 23 August. The Private View opens at 5pm, with speeches at 6.15pm.
‘Collaborations’ showcases the work of a determined cross-section of the art glass community, who place glass at the heart of their practice. All have an international standing in their specialist areas, and some have played important roles in glass education. The exhibition seeks to push the boundaries in glassmaking, and examines what glass artists can do when working with one another collaboratively. Each piece has been made specifically for the exhibition at Wolverhampton Art Gallery.
Stained glass, pencil drawings and watercolours by Ilkley-based artist Jonathan Cooke and his son Thomas will be featured in an exhibition at Mill Bridge Gallery, North Yorkshire, in September 2022.
‘Travellers’ Tales’ focuses on journeys of all kinds, real and imagined, through time and in landscape. Jonathan’s quirky stained glass narrative panels and watercolour landscapes are complemented by Thomas’s images of a fictional world steeped in the aesthetic of the Northern European late Middle Ages.
Jonathan’s stained glass art is both traditional and highly original, employing a wide repertoire of glass painting techniques from the conventional to the experimental. These result in idiosyncratic narrative pieces that are usually small scale, often intricately detailed, panels, which address the human condition.
Fascinated by stained glass since childhood, Jonathan served a four-year traditional apprenticeship at the York Glaziers Trust, where he worked on the restoration of Minster’s world-famous medieval glass following the fire in 1984. He has been in private practice since 1987 and has taught glass painting for 30 years throughout the UK, as well as in Norway and the USA.
Thomas Cooke is an autistic art historian and philosopher with eight years of teaching experience. He has always been interested in the history of art and architecture, particularly the aesthetics and culture of late medieval Northern Europe. As a child, he began creating a paracosm – an imaginary world – as a coping mechanism. He now shares this in his highly detailed landscape and architectural pencil drawings of ‘The Principality’, a central part of that world.
An A3 pencil drawing of The Principality by Thomas Cooke.
As well as the stained glass, drawings and paintings there will be a display featuring the processes involved in creating stained glass, plus a presentation/discussion entitled “’An Aurtistic Paracosm’: Disability, mental health, belief, and the creative process”. (Please check for times/dates before travelling)
The venue for the exhibition, the Mill Bridge Gallery (3 Mill Bridge, Skipton, North Yorkshire, BD23 1NJ, UK), dates back to at least 1675 and is reputed to be the oldest dwelling in Skipton.
The Travellers’ Tales exhibition is on from 8 September until 1 October inclusive, from 11am to 4pm, Thursday to Saturday. Other times are available by appointment.
An exhibition focused on glass art finished using different coldworking techniques is on display at The Glass Museum Lette in Germany from 27 August 2022.
Once cast or blown glass has cooled down, it can be technically processed further at room temperature using methods such as cutting, grinding, polishing, engraving, etching, laminating, bonding, sandblasting, wiring and painting.
A selection of glass showcasing these techniques is on view now at the Glass Museum Lette. Some of the pieces are on loan from artists, while others come from the museum’s collection. Viewed together, they draw attention to the multi-faceted and diverse possibilities of coldworked glass.
Among the featured artists is Marta Klonowska, who has gained recognition on the international art market over the years with her unique animal sculptures and installations (see main image). Based on motifs in old master paintings, Klonowska’s naturalistic animals and figures use metal armatures onto which she assembles countless precisely-cut shards and rods of coloured glass. The museum explains, “As if by magic, the cold, rigid glass is transformed into soft, lifelike bodies, putting creatures in the spotlight that are otherwise mere extras in the venerable paintings.”
Meanwhile, Josepha Gasch-Muche uses coldworking to create iridescent murals and three-dimensional objects made of splintered glass. To make them she breaks apart paper-thin, irregularly formed display glass and then layers the splinters over and next to each other, gluing them together invisibly. They appear to move and change depending on the angle of incidence or strength of the light and the position of the viewer.
Josepha Gasch-Muche’s ‘T. 10-01-17’ features splintered glass. Photo by the artist.
Cuban artist Carlos Marcoleta works in diverse fields, including glass. He layers custom-cut pieces of satin-finished float glass to form a structure, an inversion of positive and negative form, for example in the portrait of a woman who seems to be trying to free herself from inside the glass panes. Marcoleta’s work continually changes its appearance with the viewing angle, allowing the observer to explore ‘Mujer 2’ layer by layer.
Carlos Marcoleta’s ‘Caribena-Mujer 2’. Photo: Horst Kolberg.
The exhibition opens on 27 August 2022 and runs until 15 January 2023. The Museum is open on Wednesdays and Saturdays from 2-5pm and on Sundays from 11am-5pm.
Glasmuseum Lette is at Letter Berg 38, 48653 Coesfeld-Lette, Germany. Website: www.glasmuseum-lette.de
Main image: King Charles Spaniel by Marta Klonowska. Photo: Artur Gawlikowski, Galerie lorch+seidel contemporary.
Dutch glass artist Bibi Smit will be showing her colourful blown glass sculptures, ‘Maru Mori: The Heartbreaking Simplicity of Ordinary Things’ at Venice Glass Week in Italy this September.
These sculptures were inspired by the moment in which petals and fruits pass their best and fall to the ground. They become new fragments of nature’s beauty, reflecting their bygone glory.
These works evolved from her ‘Clouds’ series. Bibi explains, “I became more excited about the beauty of simplicity, as an individual fragment of nature, and how you can get so much joy from a tulip petal that falls on the table, for example. It is also how the name came about ‘Moru Mori: the heartbreaking simplicity of ordinary things’. This was taken from the Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows by John Koenig. The work has a stillness and quietness, and I found the poetry of the words to have the same feeling.”
Bibi Smit at work in her studio shaping hot glass. Photo Annemarie Sabelis.
Bibi wanted to make more of the colour and outside shape of her glass, so she closed the opening more to make that more noticeable and created tension and distortion in the shape. This distorted, awkward and clumsy shape was designed to reflect the petal that has just passed its best as it falls off the flower. “It becomes that shape that is still beautiful and still has all the fragility and colour but it’s just slightly contorted,” she continues. “At the end, I was getting really excited about adding a different kind of skin to the glass, so the glass is not only shiny and colourful, but it has this feel of faded and textured bygone glory. I am really excited about going back to the studio in the cold shop and make some new textures and shapes and creating more depth in the surface.”
See Bibi Smit’s new work at: Venice Glass Week HUB Exhibition, on the first floor of Palazzo Loredan, Venice, Italy. The show is on from 17-25 September 2022, opening on 16 September 2022.
The winner of the joint Glass Sellers’ and Contemporary Glass Society (CGS) Graduate Glass Prize 2022 is Polly Thomas-Colquhoun, with her stained glass piece entitled ‘James’.
Polly’s work was selected from 43 applications from 13 British and Irish colleges/universities. In total, 19 glass graduates won prizes or had their work selected for inclusion in the CGS’ New Graduate Review 2022 publication. Four Winners, four Highly Commended, and 11 Commended graduates were chosen to be featured in the magazine.
Prizes included cash, vouchers for glass suppliers, inclusion in New Graduate Review magazine, CGS membership and books.
The full list of winners is:
1st Prize – Polly Thomas- Colquhoun, University of Wales Trinity St. David (MA) 2nd Prize – Sogon Kim, Royal College of Art, London (MA) Runner Up – Eleanor Carney, University of Sunderland (MA) Runner Up – Stephen Chadwick, Arts University Plymouth (BA)
Highly Commended – Charlott Rodgers, Edinburgh College of Art (MFA Glass) Highly Commended – Rodrigues Goncalves, University of Sunderland (BA) Highly Commended – Zoe Johnston, De Montfort University, Leicester (BA) Highly Commended – Eleanor Hughes, University for the Creative Arts, Farnham (BA)
Commended – Christina Dembinska, University for the Creative Arts, Farnham (MA) Commended – Emma Martin, University of Wales Trinity St. David (BA) Commended – Sophia Lydia Henry, University of Wales & Trinity St. David (BA) Commended – Kamila Ratuszynska, Nottingham Trent University (BA) Commended – Ilze Jurševica, Nottingham Trent University (BA) Commended – Angela George, University of Hertfordshire (BA) Commended – Tulin Bedri, University of Wales Trinity St David (MA) Commended – Georgia Hazell, De Montfort University, Leicester (BA) Commended – Bonnie Mustoe-White, Arts University Plymouth (BA) Commended – Valerie Bernardini, Morley College, London (BTec) Commended – Shannon Baker, University for the Creative Arts, Farnham (BA)
‘Inflamed’ by Eleanor Carney won one of the two runners-up prizes. Photo: L Yabsley.
The selection panel was: Bruno Romanelli (artist), Michael Barnes (glass collector/CGS Trustee), Sarah L Brown (glass artist/CGS Trustee) and Leigh Baildham (Worshipful Company of Glass Sellers of London Charity Fund). The judges were unanimous in their choice of the overall winner and praised the high standards of the entries.
Reacting to news of her win, Polly Thomas-Colquhoun said, “I am delighted to have won the Glass Sellers/CGS prize and for all the support that comes with it. Life as an art graduate can feel a little daunting at times, so to receive recognition for my work has filled me with confidence. I have such a passion for my craft and feel excited for all the future possibilities ahead of me. As a new graduate, it is amazing to be able to get my name and work out there. Thank you CGS and The Worshipful Company of Glass Sellers!”
Leigh Baildham, Chairman of Trustees at the Worshipful Company of Glass Sellers of London Charity Fund, commented: “The Worshipful Company of Glass Sellers Charity Fund is delighted to be able to support the excellent Student Award given by the CGS. I was most impressed with the quality and diversity of design styles that were submitted this year. After the challenges of the pandemic, it’s clear that inspiration abounds in our future glass artist community. Please keep up the good work.”
The CGS New Graduate Review is a 16-page publication, which is circulated to all CGS members and associates worldwide. It is also included as a supplement in Neues Glas – New Glass: Art & Architecture magazine.
CGS is grateful to all the sponsors who provided financial support and prizes for the Glass Prize and New Graduate Review 2022, without whom this help for graduates in glass would not be possible. Sponsors: Professor Michael Barnes MD FRCP, The Worshipful Company Of Glass Sellers of London Charity Fund, Creative Glass UK, Pearsons Glass, Warm Glass, Neues Glas – New Glass: Art & Architecture and Alan J Poole.
Main image (left to right): ‘James’ by first prize winner Polly Thomas-Colquhoun, second prize winner Sogon Kim’s ‘Interstellar I&II’, and runner-up Stephen Chadwick’s Yellow Hammer’.
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