How to apply for the Coburg Prize for Contemporary Glass 2022

Hailed as “the most important European competition in international contemporary glass art”, the Coburg Prize for Contemporary Glass 2022 has launched. Make a note in your diary now as applications from glass artists will be open online between 1 June and 31 July 2021.

The Prize aims to provide a Europe-wide overview of current trends and developments in contemporary glass art and review the current situation of glass art. The competition and accompanying exhibition are open to artists living in, or originating from, Europe who work with glass as a material.

Participation is open to professional artists submitting vessels, sculptures, objects, installations or stained glass made during 2020 and 2021. Up to three pieces can be submitted for consideration. 

Initial applications are via digital images, with selection of artworks for the exhibition and competition to be made from these applications in late September 2021. A second round of judging will take place once the chosen artworks themselves have been submitted, and prize winners will be decided in December 2021.

An international jury will award three main prizes and several special prizes. The first prize is €15,000, second prize is €10,000 and the third prize is €5,000. There will also be an audience award.

Works by approximately 100 to 150 artists will be selected for the exhibition, taking place between 10 April and 25 September 2022 in the historical rooms of Veste Coburg (Coburg Castle) and the European Museum of Modern Glass in Rödental, Germany. 

The previous Coburg Prize for Contemporary Glass was held in 2014, when the work of 150 artists from 34 countries was presented.

The objective of the Coburg Prize is to show which design and processing techniques artists currently use, what thematic content predominates and whether current social questions, such as sustainability, migration, political suppression, globalisation and climate change are taken into account. 

The event is also concerned with ascertaining the extent to which glass is still considered purely as a material or whether, given its numerous possible uses and special properties, such as transparency, it is viewed as a complex medium with multiple meanings.

The award ceremony will take place on 9 April 2022 in Coburg. A bilingual catalogue will be published to accompany the exhibition. Works will be available for sale through the Veste Coburg Art Collections, with a sales commission charge of 20%.

The competition is organised in cooperation with the Alexander Tutsek-Stiftung foundation, based in Munich, Germany.

Note that restrictions due to the coronavirus pandemic are possible, which may lead to the cancellation of the competition.

More information and registration (from 1 June) are via the website: https://www.coburger-glaspreis.de 

Image: Artworks from the last Coburg Prize exhibition in 2014.

Apply for Cambridge Invitational Art Contest & Exhibition 2021

The organisers of this year’s Cambridge Invitational Art Contest & Exhibition have extended the application deadline until 1 July and hope to hold a physical exhibition of works from 16-22 August 2021.

Artists who are affiliated with an art association, society or group, such as the Contemporary Glass Society (CGS), are invited to submit entries. Each artist must submit two works of art that best represent them as an artist.

There is no theme to the contest and all mediums of art, including photography, can be entered. Performance and video art are excluded.

Artwork size must not exceed 120cm x 120cm x 30cm for artworks to be hung on the wall. Sculptures must not exceed 150cm in height x 100cm x 100cm. The total cost of entry is £35.

Galeria Moderna, the organiser of The Cambridge Invitational Art Contest and Exhibition and The London Invitational Art Contest and Exhibition, is working in association with art supplier, Cass Art, and commercial gallery, Castle Fine Art.

Twelve winning artists will be selected by a panel of esteemed judges, each a gallery owner/manager from Cambridge or London, alongside this year’s guest judge, the artist and sculptor John Doubleday. These artists’ work will comprise the 2nd Annual Cambridge Art Contest and Exhibition 2021, and will be shown in an online exhibition hosted by Galeria Moderna and Cass Art, and a physical exhibition at Castle Fine Art’s Cambridge gallery.

Cass Art will host the winning artworks and blog interviews with the 12 winning artists on its website. Cass Art also promotes the winning artists of Sky Arts’ annual ‘Portrait Artist of the Year’ TV series and The London Invitational Art Contest and Exhibition, providing excellent exposure for the successful artists.

Restrictions permitting, each winner and a guest will be invited to attend a preview and awards evening at Castle Fine Art to receive their Cambridge Invitational Art Award. The evening will include further individual awards, prizes, drinks and a chance to chat to the judges and commercial art purchasers and take part in media interviews.

For one week, the winning artworks will be exhibited for viewing and for sale, with 20% of the sales commission donated to the beneficiary charities, Arts 4 Dementia and Arts and Minds.

Should the government or Castle Fine Art feel it is unsafe to hold such an event at that time, the preview and or exhibition will be postponed to a more suitable date later in the year.

Important dates:
Submission deadline: midnight on 1 July 2021
Winners announced: 21 July 2021
Preview Exhibition & Awards Evening: 15 August 2021
Online exhibition: 16 August 2021
Physical exhibition: 16-22 August 2021.

To find out more, register and submit your entries, visit the website.

Glasmuseum Lette reopens with retrospective exhibition

Germany’s Lette Glass Museum is set to reopen its doors at 2pm on 20 March 2021 with the new exhibition, ‘Lette Glass Museum. Exhibitions and Collection 2016-2020’. The show will continue until 22 August 2021.

There will be no opening event, as this would not be compatible with the applicable hygiene and distance regulations in place because of the coronavirus pandemic.

The number of visitors is limited to a maximum of eight people per floor in the glass museum and a maximum of six people in the glass depot.

This year, collector and founder Lilly Ernsting, looks back and celebrates her 25 years of exhibiting and collecting with a special exhibition at the Glasmuseum Lette. 

A selection of objects acquired over the past five years at exhibitions and on travels will be displayed. There is also a catalogue offering insights into the museum’s activities during this period accompanying the show.

A series of in-house exhibitions and numerous journeys made across Europe bear witness to several busy years of collecting. During those years, 270 objects have joined the collection. From this rich assortment, 60 pieces have been selected to illustrate the museum’s broad exhibition and collection concept. 

Lilly comments: “The current show displays all the vibrancy and diversity of the collection itself, like a multi-coloured kaleidoscope revealing the exuberant creativity of the glass scene. These glass objects thus serve as a mirror of developments in art glass, in artistic concepts and in the applied techniques.”

Her maxims are to have direct contact with artists, frequent visits to galleries and museums, examine objects on site, and to talk with all those involved. She believes that this is the only way to maintain the continuity and quality of the exhibitions and collection. 

Contemplating all the activities and exhibitions that have developed since she began her modest private collection in the 1970s, Lilly exclaims, “Who would have thought!”

Opening times:
Glasmuseum Lette: Wednesdays and Saturdays  2-5pm; Sundays 11am-5pm
Glasdepot Höltingshof:  Sundays 11am-5pm.

Please note that, in accordance with the Corona Protection Ordinance, you must book your visit to the Coesfeld district in advance by phone or email for a one-hour time slot and leave your contact details with the museum.

The address is: Glasmuseum Lette, Letter Berg 38, D-48653 Coesfeld, Germany. Website: www.glasmuseum-lette.de 

Image artist: Alena Matejka, Water (2020). Photo: Gabriel Urbánek.

The Fruits of her Labours

Glass artist Sivan Pais combines pate de verre and printmaking skills to create her delicate artworks. Glass Network digital’s editor, Linda Banks, discovers more about her and her practice.

What led you to start working with glass?
It is actually all thanks to my Aunt Maya. I had been taking pottery classes in the north of Israel for a year, but when I moved closer to her I started helping in her jewelry studio. I began experimenting with flame work, making beads, and kiln work, fusing and slumping Judaica and bowls. I heard that Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design taught a course that combined ceramics and glass, so I decided to apply and develop my art more seriously.

 

Detail of Ripeness no.10, showing the 3D effect created with the pate de verde process.

What glass techniques have you used in your career and why do you have a preference for pate de verre work today?
While I was a student, I explored almost every glass technique, including glassblowing, flame work (soft and borosilicate glasses), kiln casting, fusing, slumping, coldwork, engraving and sandblasting, as well as pottery and ceramic sculpting. I thought I should embrace the opportunity to learn new skills and acquire a large skill set. Then, later on, I could decide what I wanted to do. 

I also added a printmaking course each year. To me, adding imagery gives more depth. I fell in love with printmaking and used it to introduce another layer of interest to my final piece.

Sivan Pais applying fine glass fit to the silk screen. Photo: Amir Koren.

When I saw a demonstration on how to transfer powdered frit through a silk screen, I knew I wanted to explore more and to stretch the boundaries of this technique. It allows me to work fast and multiply with great accuracy. There is something wonderful about working with glass in its most basic form, returning the raw material to the same place that it began, sculpting with sand. It’s amazing to me that, within the tiniest grain of sand, there is the entire potential of glass, like DNA in cells. I love how it moves, plays, and takes a different form each time. And the colours are amazing!

How did you develop your unique style of working with delicate glass and printmaking?
It took a lot of experimenting and testing to see what images were best to print. I also had to work out the precise temperature needed, because the pieces are so delicate. Sometimes the different colours can be over-fused or under-fused. I needed to make them strong enough to be able to play with them when arranging them after heating. I make twice as many as I need, because they break a lot!

Ripeness no.4. Many extra pieces must be made because there are a lot of breakages.

I wasn’t sure how my final-year piece would turn out. At that time, I was going through two years of recovery from an autoimmune disease. I was taking myself on a journey of healing, and expressing that journey through art. I used art as therapy to express my feelings and let the process show me the way to heal. Each step revealed only one next step, so, while I had a vision of what emotions I wanted portray, and what I was trying to evoke in the viewer, it was not until the final step, when everything was assembled on the large silk screen, that I knew how it was going to look. So, the final artwork was a surprise, even to me.

What is your favourite tool or piece of equipment and why?
It is hard to choose just one tool, because the process has many different steps. Every step has its own tool and way of working. But I guess the most helpful one in printmaking and in the final assembly is duct tape. It is versatile and I use it a lot for many things. I also have long tweezers, which I use a lot to handle the hot pate de verre pieces when the kiln is still hot. I make rapid exchanges to save time, electricity and heat. I also use the tweezers for the assembly.

Detail of Ripeness no.11.

What is the thinking behind the ‘Ripeness’ series? What message do you want to covey?
The works that comprise ‘Ripeness’ are an expression of the healing process that occurred inside me. Their creation was driven by gratitude, and a desire to pay tribute to the fruits which had given me back control over my body. As my health improved and prospered, I discovered paradise in simple eating, and delight in consuming nourishment in exactly the form that nature gives it to us. ‘Ripeness’ invites the viewer to be present in the face of this simple abundance and happiness, which we all deserve to experience.

Ripeness no. 1. 290x215cm. Photo: Noam Shainberg.

The project is an allegory on a rule of nature, an observation between two situations that are opposite but yet contain one another: the decay versus the ripening.

The works in ‘Ripeness’ are created from fragile elements of glass. The fragility of the glass symbolises the delicate balance of health, and how easily health can be broken. The glass pieces are placed into rich assemblages of movement and colour, representing the gateway to the heaven of the inner kingdom, an imaginary wilderness full of desires to taste fruits I have not yet known.

The issue of health is worthy of public and cultural discourse. No one is immune to disease, and the prevalence of sickness is on the rise. Through my art, I aim to demonstrate that illness is not a decree humanity should accept; health and wellness are possible and achievable through natural, simple methods.

Do you have a favourite piece of work? Why is it your favourite?
When I see a piece of art where I can tell that the artist worked on it for ages, meticulously putting all of his or her crazy mind into the piece, it immediately captures me.

I love the artist Kathleen Ryan’s work – her ‘Bad Fruit’ series. Her work is so beautiful and I feel that she deals with the same topics as me, the beauty of decaying. All my life I have been interested in mould or rotten things; it is like a microcosm of a new life. Her grapes and lemons are phenomenal!

Where do you show and sell your art?
Currently my largest piece from ‘Ripeness’ is on show at the Eretz Israel Museum in Tel Aviv, as part of the Biennale of Crafts & Design exhibition in the glass pavilion. I also sell smaller pieces in the museum gift shop and in a few home interior design shops around Israel. Additionally, I’m excited that, as of 2021, my work is displayed at the Blue Gallery in Delray Beach, Florida, in the USA.

Who or what inspires you?
I love nature. What I love most in nature is seeing it’s process – how it’s always changing, and striving for balance. I love to see that everything in nature has a purpose, and nothing goes to waste. It makes me feel very optimistic knowing that, no matter what humans do, nature continues to change and heal.

I am, of course, also inspired by my close circle of family and friends. Each one has struggles in their life and I learn so much from them, their point of view, and the different ways of overcoming everything.

Ripeness no.6.

How has the coronavirus pandemic impacted your practice?
At first it didn’t seem like such a bad thing to be close to home at my studio and using all of that time to create. I was keeping safe, keeping my mind clear and quiet, thinking healthy thoughts and not letting all the panic and stress of the media get to me.

In September 2020, I moved to Florida and have continued to create at the Blue Gallery studio so, in some ways, the virus hasn’t stopped me achieving my goals. However, now it’s been a year since the pandemic started, and I think we are all feeling the impact of a world that has significantly slowed down. Many museums, galleries, and exhibitions are completely closed.

I’m praying that we all are able to continue to create art, and life will go back normal so we can socialise again, and that better days will come.

I’m very happy to share my art with this community of glass lovers. For more visuals of my work please look at my Instagram: Sivanpais.glass.art or my website: https://www.sivanpais.com 

About the artist
Sivan Pais is an Israeli artist, born in 1990. She graduated with a BFA from Bezalel Academy of Art and Design, Jerusalem, in 2019.

She received a full scholarship to Pilchuck Glass School, Washington, USA, in 2017 and undertook a course in vitreography and engraving with Professor Andrea Dezso. 

In 2018 she took part in the ERASMUS exchange programme at Eugeniusz Geppert academy of Art and Design in Wroclaw Poland, studying in the printmaking and ceramic departments.

She received ‘the Andy’ – the Andrea M. Bronfman Prize for the Arts, in the field of glass, for her graduation project in 2019.

Main feature image: Detail of ‘Ripeness’.

Join CGS for a Glass Weekend Extravaganza on 20 and 21 March

Stuck staring at your four walls? Can’t get out? Why not join us online from the comfort of your home for a CGS Weekend Extravaganza all about glass this March?

Over the weekend of 20 and 21 March 2021 we will take you on a journey to visit glass artists, hear talks, learn about techniques and take virtual tours!

This brilliant weekend of delights has been organised by our Chair, Susan Purser Hope.

Itinerary (all UK times):

Saturday 20 March:

2.30pm            Johannes von Stumm – talk: “The Harmony of Glass, Stone & Metal”

7.30pm            David Reekie – talk: “Techniques for Telling a Story”

Sunday 21 March:

2.30pm            Joshua Kerley – Pâte de verre demonstration

7.30pm            Pippa Stacey – talk: “Glasswork in a Spin”

Make a note of these dates and times in your diary. Login details have been emailed directly to CGS members. If you’re not a member yet, why not sign up now so you can enjoy these presentations, and many more benefits?

Main image: David Reekie in his studio.

BSMGP presents a webinar with Alfred Fisher

This year the British Society of Master Glass Painters (BSMGP) marks its centenary. As part of its celebrations in this significant year, glass artist Alfred Fisher MBE FMGP will present a webinar entitled ‘Fifty Years of the Master Glass Painters and Much More’.

Alfred Fisher will be speaking about his many years of working with stained glass and his memories of some of the characters from the BSMGP’s history in a webinar presentation on Friday 12 March 2021 at 7pm (UK time).

He has produced stained glass windows of the highest order for over six decades, and his legacy of work can be found in some of the most prestigious buildings in the UK, including Westminster Abbey, Buckingham Palace, Chequers and the Guildhall.

Alf began his career at Whitefriars Studio in the 1950s, where he was an early pioneer of fusing glass for architectural settings and became their last Chief Designer before co-founding Chapel Studio with Peter Archer in 1973.

He is a past Chairman and Honorary Secretary of the BSMGP and is currently Vice-President. He will talk about some of the people he recalls from 60 years ago and their influences on his own work, from Erwin Bossanyi to John Piper and John Hutton.

Tickets are limited and cost £5. Book via this link.

Image: Stained glass by Alfred Fisher.

Biscuit Factory contemporary glass exhibition open

The Contemporary Glass Society is pleased to announce that an exhibition of glass by its members is now open at the Biscuit Factory, as a result of an exciting new collaboration with the gallery in 2021.

This is the first season of work that will be shown and offered for sale via the Biscuit Factory, with new glass artists participating in each quarter.

The current selection of artwork is by UK-based artists Catherine Mahe, Helen Grierson, Kate Henderson, Morag Reekie, Pat Marvell, Penny Riley-Smith, Stevie Davies and Sue Woolhouse.

Work includes sculptures and functional wares, made in a diverse variety of styles, colours and techniques.

You can view and purchase all the pieces via this link.

The Biscuit Factory also offers the option to buy in instalments via the Own Art scheme.

The Biscuit Factory is an independent contemporary art, craft and design gallery set in the heart of Newcastle’s cultural quarter. Housed in a former Victorian warehouse, it has gallery spaces set over two floors. It displays a range of contemporary fine art, sculpture, original prints and jewellery, quality craftsmanship and design-led homewares from over 200 artists every season.

Feature image: Textured Green and Pink Sculpture by Catherine Mahe.

GAS invites applications for sustainable glass exhibition

Glass artists are invited to submit work for an upcoming Glass Art Society (GAS) exhibition focusing on sustainability.

The event, called Trace, will feature as part of the 2021 Virtual GAS Conference. It will showcase work that comments on current global environmental issues, work that uses sustainable materials, such as upcycled glass, or work made using sustainable processes/practices.

Trace is an open submission, juried exhibition and all artwork must be submitted via online application. The 2021 jury panel includes members of GAS’s Green Committee. The 2021 professional jurors are Amber Cowan (USA),Candice-Elena Greer (UK), Frederik Rombach (Belgium) and Juli Bolaños-Durman (Scotland). The jurors will choose the works for inclusion in the show and select the recipients of awards and prizes.

The Green exhibition will be launched during the virtual conference, which takes place from 20-22 May 2021.

As a special concession for this first year, application is free to all. In the future, there will be a small fee for non-members of GAS.

Applications must be submitted by the deadline of 21 March 2021 and artists will be notified of selection by late March 2021.

GAS encourages the sale of artwork during the exhibition but, while GAS will assist in connecting buyers to artists, artists will be responsible for handling sales and shipping.

Work can be marked ‘Not for Sale’ if you prefer.

Artwork must feature glass as the primary element and will be selected on the basis of originality, intentionality and the innovative use of glass. The call is open to artists working in any form of glassmaking or video works documenting glass-related performance pieces.

Artists may submit work individually or as a group piece, but not both. Only one work of art may be submitted.

Further information and the online application form are available via this link.

Capturing the underwater world in glass

Sculptor Emily Williams has developed her own way of hand torching glass, which, to her, is a way of drawing with space and light. Her glass coral reef sculptures draw attention to this hidden, fragile world. CGS Glass Network digital’s editor, Linda Banks, finds out more.

What led you to start working with glass?
With a long background in sculpture, I have always explored new media. I have worked for decades specialising in woodworking, metal fabrication, and metal casting. At a certain point, I was really looking for a life-changing journey as a sculptor. I needed a medium that possessed the immediacy of drawing. Hand-torched glass seemed to solve all the problems that I found with the opacity of wood and metal. Glass is luminous. For me, hand torching glass is an immediate form of drawing with space and light.

Petal, hand torched borosilicate glass. Photo: Mike Culpepper.

What glass techniques have you used in your career and why do you have a preference for hand torch work today?
Back in the 1970s, as a high school student in Virginia Beach, my father got me to sign up for a stained glass course. He thought I could decorate the house for him with custom lamp shades and windows! I made some stained glass, but really did not pursue it in any way beyond the class.

Around 2007, I became interested in glass casting and mould making. I cast glass using open face moulds, reservoir moulds, and pate de verre moulds. I enjoyed it for a while, but really became bored with the time-consuming processes of mould making.

Eventually, I circled back to the idea of glass flameworking. When I first became interested in glass in 2007, I stocked up on some books, such as Contemporary Lampworking Part 1 and Part 2 as well as The Penland Book of Glass. Initially, I really vacillated between cast glass and flameworking.  Flameworking just seemed so overwhelming to me. Years later, when I went back into these books, I had an epiphany when I saw the work of Susan Plum in The Penland Book of Glass. I thought, “That’s the glass process I want to use – it’s immediate, spontaneous, experimental, unpredictable, surprising…”

Glass Seaweed, hand torched borosilicate glass. Photo: Mike Culpepper.

Since beginning hand-torched glass, I have used a variety of glass torches. As my process has evolved, I have acquired more torches and specialised tools. I have a large glass bench torch and have experimented with glass blowing. I have collected a variety of hand torches as well. Most of the time, I use a combination of a large bench torch and a Smith Little Torch. Depending on the sculpture, I work borosilicate glass rods in the bench torch and the mini hand torch. I have a preference for the Smith Little Torch and borosilicate colours that work well with that torch’s chemistry. The mini torch is lightweight and easy to manoeuvre. Its functionality is really enhanced by using a four-and-a-half-inch custom tip, which allows me to go deeper into a glass form.

Can you tell us something about how you developed your special glass working methods for your latest work?
It has been a long road to get to this point! As I developed my ideas for this glass working process, I explored different plant and marine life forms. Initially, I created some organic forms based on wintering plant structures, dried plant petals and vines. As these pieces evolved, I became more interested, not only in the complex structures, but also in capturing a sense of movement. Using only a bench torch to achieve these types of forms is really not possible for me. In order to fully fuse the glass rods properly, you have to be able to work three-dimensionally and be able to completely fuse each element. This means sometimes reaching deep inside a forest of glass!

In the beginning, I used a National hand torch and did some amazingly complex work. The National hand torch was not easy to use, and the burns could be ferocious! Eventually, I began using the Smith Little Torch, but the standard tips were very small. So, I found a Hornet custom tip and it was a huge improvement. The Smith torch is light and can fit into the small areas where the National torch could not go.

Brain Coral, hand torched borosilicate glass. Photo: Mike Culpepper.

After creating a few marine life forms, I became fascinated with different types of corals and seaweeds. I never run out of excitement for the magical patterns, colours and forms found in a coral reef. Brain coral, long tentacle plate corals, feather stars, and even water itself, continue to inspire my work. Currently, I am moving into creating a series of smaller, more complex sculptures that explore colour, such as pink Gorgonian Coral, green seaweed, Red Coral and Fan Coral.

Pink Long Tentacle Plate Coral, hand torched borosilicate glass. Photo: Mike Culpepper

What is your favourite tool or piece of equipment and why?
My favourite tool is the Smith Little Torch because it is so versatile. I can adjust the torch flame to fuse from fairly thick rods down to super-thin rods of 2mm. The torch can be equipped with a variety of tips for different types of fusing jobs, from flat to highly dimensional objects. The torch is lightweight and easy to control. I have used a variety of bench torches and larger hand torches, but I prefer working with this mini torch.

Your current work focuses on glass reefs. What drove you to this subject?
I cannot say one single event or thing led me to my current work in creating ocean life forms. It was a culmination of many things, such as living on the water, drawing, reading, exploring historical scientific illustrations and scientific glass models. I am also interested in aquatic photography and video that examines the rich underwater diversity of marine life found in reefs. I am not a diver but I do dive into a lot of historical archives at the Biodiversity Heritage Library at the Smithsonian. Through their archives, I can access historical illustrations, some dating back centuries. I use these to study the complex biology of different marine life species.

Years ago, I created my first glass marine life form. The idea was to capture the transparency of the form and its visual movement. This stark skeletal form of a jellyfish had tentacles that seemed to rise and sway in space, as if in water. These ideas of glass linear forms suggesting movement are still prevalent in every glass work that I make.

Jellyfish, hand torched borosilicate glass. Photo: Mike Culpepper.

Do you have a favourite piece? Why is it your favourite?
I really do not have favourite sculptures. But one work that I come back to again and again, in terms of form and colour, is the Pink Long Tentacle Plate Coral. The profuse pattern of the tentacles and the circular form give me a lot of ideas for future works. Another work is the Large Brain Coral that I made years ago. The sheer scale and intricacy of that sculpture was a huge challenge. It really tested my skills for engineering the physical strength of the glass to achieve a large, voluminous form. The intricate structural patterns that I developed are based on the meander pattern found in brain corals. The pattern of small tentacles that cover the form mimic the behaviour of a feeding brain coral. Click this link to see a video of the fusing process used when completing that glass sculpture.

Where do you show and sell your work?
I have shown my glass sculpture in art museums, art centres, galleries and glass art auctions. A few museums have purchased my work, including The LaGrange Art Museum and the Alice C. Sabatini Gallery in Topeka, Kansas. I have also sold in the Glass Society Auction in Chicago, The Liberty Glass Art Museum Auction in Philadelphia, and the Urban Glass Gala Auction in Brooklyn, New York.  Generally, I sell my work through my website at www.emilywilliamssculpture.com. In addition, people contact me for special commission work. I have completed commissions for individual collectors and the LaGrange Art Museum as well. Recently, I added an online store to my website to showcase glass sculptures of different marine life in varying sizes, colours and price ranges. At this time, I am focusing on pink and green seaweeds, as well as various species in bright colours.

Water, hand torched borosilicate glass. Photo: Mike Culpepper.

Do you have a career highlight?
While I am a professional artist, with a decades-long career as a sculptor, I am also a university professor. I have taught Sculpture, 3D Design, and Visual Arts lecture courses since 1989. Beyond teaching, my greatest career highlight has been moving into the medium of torched glass. I have never felt more satisfied as a sculptor! The process, the glass material, and the community of glass artists is very fulfilling.

A great moment for me was showing the Pink Long Tentacle Plate Coral in the travelling exhibit Lifeforms 2016 at the Pittsburgh Glass Center, and Corning, New York. I was able to show my work alongside other glass artists whose work I truly admire. This exhibit also coincided with the 2016 GAS Conference at the Corning Museum, which also featured the amazing Blaschka exhibit of scientific glass models and exquisite drawings of marine life forms, Fragile Legacy.

Who or what inspires you?
I am interested in marine life and different types of plants. A big part of my work is ocean life forms, such as corals and seaweed. Currently, I am working on a large series of glass marine life sculptures featuring brilliant, intense colours. I am awestruck by the patterns and movement that can be suggested in different corals and seaweed glass forms. As mentioned earlier, I am inspired by aquatic photography, historical scientific illustration, and the Blaschka scientific glass models.

I collect photography and historical illustrations while developing an idea for a new work. Right now, I am revisiting some earlier ideas relating to seaweed. Years back, the book An Ocean Garden inspired a large glass seaweed sculpture. The photography made for that book was spectacular and so detailed!  Within that book, the Gloiosiphonia verticillaris, Monterey Bay, CA c.1898 inspired the large glass seaweed.

I am currently delving into new, brilliantly coloured glass seaweeds on a smaller scale. When I do research, something might strike me, such as a particular colour, pattern, or sense of movement in how a species poses itself. From that, I begin making a series of drawings, from which I progress into the glass working process. Every glass sculpture evolves from the drawing process.

Nest, hand torched borosilicate glass. Photo: Mike Culpepper.

How has the coronavirus impacted your practice?
For the most part, I am pretty much a hermit, so my glass practice is about the same. During the past year, there have been a lot fewer glass exhibits and invitationals. I miss showing my work and interacting with people. Normally, I might be doing a public glass demonstration at least once a year, so I have also missed out on that type of public interaction. This past year, I have invested a lot of time in redesigning my website, adding a new online store, and developing a new online glass course.

And finally…
If anyone has any questions, they are welcome to email me through my website’s Contact page. There are plenty of interesting glass articles and videos on my website that explain my glass working processes. For those interested in pursuing glass fusing with a torch, I am now offering the online Glass Fusing with a Hand Torch Course . Click the link to view details about the course and how to sign up.

About the artist

A native of Richmond, Virginia, USA, Emily Williams received her Bachelor of Fine Arts in Sculpture from Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, Virginia. She holds a Master of Fine Arts in Sculpture from Washington University in Saint Louis, Missouri.

She began teaching as Assistant Professor of Art at Clarion University of Pennsylvania in 1989. She has continued teaching at Troy University Online. She has received numerous awards, such as the Fulbright Hays grant to Italy, a number of fellowships in art, plus purchase awards from several museums.

Main feature image: Emily Williams creating a long tentacle plate coral in hand-torched borosilicate glass.

‘A Postcard From…’ exhibition launched

The CGS is running a series of selling exhibitions to showcase its members’ talents in contemporary glass and enable you to purchase directly from the makers. The latest show is ‘A Postcard From…’, a theme chosen by glass collector and enthusiast Alan J Poole.  This upbeat theme has been interpreted by over 50 glass artists in their individual styles.

Image: Steven Graham.

Through these difficult times, our minds sometimes wander to happy days, holidays and gatherings, or just places we love to visit. So, take your minds off to distant shores and view inspired, postcard-size work by CGS members

Our Chair, Sue, and Administrator, Pam, are holding a launch evening on Saturday 6 March at 6pm (UK time) to guide you through the gallery of images with their usual humour and enthusiasm. Each piece will be highlighted in turn and some will be presented by the artists themselves, providing an overview of their artworks. The launch evening is restricted so please email Pam if you (and your friends) would like to register to attend on admin@cgs.org.uk .

The show is now open for all to view so you have an opportunity to browse (and buy!) all these diverse contemporary glass art pieces directly from the artists. They are all conveniently postcard-sized and available at affordable prices (£50, £100 or £150). Some have already been sold so take a look now before you miss out!

Seashells By The Seashore. Artist: Fiona Fawcett.

Treat yourself or a loved one – and don’t forget that Mother’s Day is approaching. There is sure to be a beautiful gift that takes your fancy.

Seascape 1. Artist: Claire Hall.

The ‘A Postcard From…’ exhibition continues online until 31 March 2021. Click here to view.

Main feature image: Artist Purnima Patel