This August, London Glassblowing will present the exhibition ‘Glass Heaven’, bringing together the talents of two renowned glass artists from different eras: Peter Layton and Tim Rawlinson.
For decades, Peter Layton has captivated audiences with his bold, expressive and painterly glass works. A celebrated veteran in the glass world, his unwavering commitment to the medium has seen his practice evolve over the past 50 years. Since the studio’s humble beginnings on the banks of the Thames nearly half a century ago, Peter has played a pivotal role in nurturing the next generation of talent.
Peter Layton’s ‘Aurora’ pieces are inspired by the beauty of the Northern Lights.
Tim Rawlinson brings a fresh and innovative approach, challenges conventional boundaries and offers a refreshing perspective that resonates with the ever-evolving landscape of glass art. His vibrant colourways and illusive compositions are a testament to the exceptional creativity that London Glassblowing continues to foster.
Tim Rawlinson’s work reflects the innovation of the younger generation of glassblowers.
The exhibition title, ‘Glass Heaven’, inspired both artists to look skyward for their creative inspirations. Peter has reimagined many iconic series, including his ‘Burano’ collection. His newly developed ‘Aurora’ pieces evoke the beauty of the Northern Lights, while Tim has introduced a more milky, cloud-like finish to his signature ‘Echoes of Light’ pieces.
Glass Heaven is on show from 2 August to 1 September 2024 at London Glassblowing, 62-66 Bermondsey Street, London SE1 3UD. Website
Main image: Peter Layton (left) and Tim Rawlinson have responded to the Glass Heaven theme in their glass art for this exhibition.
Alongside the many activities and exhibitions taking place during the 2024 International Festival of Glass event in Stourbridge this summer, the Contemporary Glass Society (CGS) has its own programme of events. Check them out below.
Friday 23 August
Venue: Ruskin Glass Centre, The Glasshouse, Wollaston Road, Amblecote, Stourbridge, West Midlands, DY8 4HF
2pm CGS AGM (Contact admin@cgs.org.uk for more details). Come and share your thoughts about the future of the organisation.
3pm Chit Chat. Ten CGS members show images and talk about their work for 3 minutes each.
5pm ‘Thanks for The Memory’ glass postcard exhibition launch and sale. Bring your credit card!
12 noon CGS Raffle Draw. Find out who has won some unique glass prizes and helped to raise funds for future CGS projects. If you want to buy tickets, please email Pam via admin@cgs.org.uk
Read the International Festival of Glass full programme here.
The Architectural Glass Centre at Swansea College of Art is offering two specialist glass painting masterclasses with stained glass expert Jonathan Cooke in September 2024.
The masterclasses are suitable for both beginners and those with previous experience of glass painting. Jonathan will demonstrate and teach his techniques, as well as discussing materials, tools and firing schedules.
On the glass painting masterclass there will be ample time for participants to practise, produce samples and create finished pieces to their own designs.
An additional masterclass is available, focusing on the use of enamel and silver stains. This will feature an exploration of materials and techniques for use principally in traditional glass painting, using a range of stains, transparent and opaque enamels. It will explore a range of media and mixing techniques, plus application and firing regimes to achieve different effects and outcomes.
The glass painting masterclass takes place from 16-19 September 2024 (price £310) and the silver stain and enamel masterclass takes place on 20-22 September 2024 (price £330).
Both masterclasses will be held at UWTSD Swansea College of Art, Alex Building, Alexandra Road, Swansea SA1 5DX, Wales.
Once again, the Queen Elizabeth Scholarship Trust (QEST) has opened for applications for its grant funding of up to £18,000 for UK makers.
Talented and aspiring craftspeople who want to take their craft to the next level can apply for up to £18,000 in funding for Scholarships, up to £10,000 for Emerging Maker Grants and up to £12,000 for Apprenticeship training.
Many glass artists have benefited from this support over the years, which goes beyond money, often providing opportunities to exhibit in prestigious locations, as well as take part in collaborations and receive commissions through its extensive craft network.
Applications close on Monday 12 August 2024 at 5pm.
The QEST charity has awarded more than £6m to almost 800 individuals working across the UK in 130 different craft disciplines.
There are three optional ‘How To Apply’ Zoom sessions to introduce interested makers to the different funding available, providing tips and advice for filling in an application and the opportunity for a Q&A:
Bookings are now open for a variety of events and workshops to be held during the International Festival of Glass in Stourbridge, West Midlands, from 23-26 August 2024.
Ruskin’s Seven Lamps: An Evening Spectacular
Previewing the Saturday night entertainment plan, Festival Director Janine Christley, said, “Walk the Plank thrilled us at the first ever festival back in 2004, so what better way to end our time at the Ruskin Glass Centre than to invite them back to create a fantastic Saturday night spectacle? Experts in outdoor celebration, for this event Walk the Plank have taken inspiration from Ruskin’s Seven Lamps to create an evening of music and fire.”
The centrepiece of the event will be a huge fire sculpture by artist Felix Rowberry, called ‘In the Balance’. Its globes of flame depict elements of today’s world as seen by children and young people.
There will be live music from the Boat Band to open the evening, with musician in residence, James Watts, collaborating with Brendan Murphy and his glass instruments on the closing music.
There is wide and varied programme of workshops, celebrating all that has been great about the Festival over the last 20 years, all that is being achieved in the glass world currently and looking forward to the future. There are workshops suitable for artists and families alike.
In addition to learning about glassmaking techniques, participants can try their hand at papermaking, weaving, felting and calligraphy.
Thanks to Arts Council England funding, the 2024 Festival features a number of accessible events and workshops for Disabled/d/Deaf artists and visitors.
There are two free workshops with artist Julie Coakley for the blind and visually impaired. Julie will offer a workshop in three-dimensional drawing with glass and another in working in monochrome. Julie lost her sight at age 42, and so developed new methods of working to allow her to continue to work in kiln-formed glass.
On Friday and Sunday there are opportunities to explore the Festival with deaf artist Olivier Jamin. Olivier will introduce the exhibitions and activities and give translations explaining different glass terminology. He will be accompanied by a British Sign Language (BSL) interpreter so hearing people can join the tour.
In addition, BSL interpreters will be available each day. Advanced booking is advised.
Festival partners’ activities
Stourbridge Glass Museum is embracing the Festival’s ‘Past, Present, Future’ theme with talks on Saturday and Sunday. Graham Fisher MBE will look at the past, discussing the decline of crystal factories and the emergence of studio glass; Terri L Colledge brings the audience to the present with a talk about the Naples blue vase project and contemporary cameo glass; finally Allister Malcolm looks to the future with sustainable electric studio glassmaking.
Riverside House will be holding a number of free workshops throughout the Festival weekend, offering the chance to try out glassmaking techniques. The popular Mango Mosaics workshops will return on Saturday and Sunday, followed by wire and fused glass workshops with Terri Malcolm on Monday. These free workshops must be booked in advance as places are limited.
The Contemporary Glass Society (CGS) and Stourbridge Glass Museum are working together to curate the ‘New Horizons’ exhibition, featuring new and recent work by over 20 talented CGS members.
Main image: Pan Gottic entertaining festival visitors at the last event in 2022.
German glass artist Markus Marschmann has developed his mastery of scientific glassblowing skills to produce organic artworks and, currently, larger installations with a sense of mischief. Linda Banks finds out more.
You are a skilled scientific glassblower. What led you to start working with glass?
When I started my training as a scientific glassblower, at the age of 17, I had little interest in art. My motivations were simpler in nature. On one hand, I was fascinated with this unique material, which has the exciting properties of transparency, clarity and the ability to be worked in a softening range; it’s such a responsive material. On the other hand, it presented me with the possibility of being able to make my smoking tools myself.
However, scientific glass construction opened a new world to me. It encapsulates so many aspects, from making components – like in a ship in a bottle – to the historical element and then the scientific aspect: to capture life! I find it almost like placing internal organs. These technical scientific structures began to take on a sculptural quality for me, and this has become a vital part of my work.
‘Cerebral No 62’ goes beyond scientific glassblowing.
What other glass techniques have you used, and which do you prefer?
I have used a vast range of glass techniques so far in my development as an artist, including glassblowing, glassmaking, glass cutting and glass casting. Of these, I find the greatest joy in glassmaking, as it puts me into a meditative, aware state of mind, through physical exertion and immediate, direct action.
However, I have also developed a great fondness for glass cutting, which puts me into a meditative state in a different way. During cutting, there is time for contemplation and the actions are very deliberate, whereas during glassmaking, the focused process leads to more subconscious and abstract actions that only come with the natural behaviour of hot glass.
Closeup of ‘Polimorphie’.
What is your creative approach? Do you draw your ideas out or dive straight in with the materials?
My creative drive has always been to go on a journey with the material, so there are rarely sketches for my work, as the material usually shows me the direction it should take. I seek a dialogue with the material, and sometimes drawings are created after the creative process as a complement to the work.
Markus’ drawings reflect the complexity of his glass works.
You like to create organic forms within simple shapes. What inspires your work?
I am interested in many different things and phenomena in the world, but glass itself is an inspiring source for me. I follow it and, as a result, my sculpture is created. What is even more interesting is that the sculpture can radiate inspiration for the viewer in turn. It is just a simple, organic form, but it can be a compression of enormous complexity. Whether it’s macro- or micro-views, or perhaps scientific and phenomenal, my work leads me to individual inspiring discoveries.
‘Polymorph III’ was made in 2022.
What message(s) do you want to convey through your art?
My works convey themselves through the material. Mastering it requires a lot of practice, craftsmanship and technical precision. Overcoming the process of production and transforming it into simplicity, clarity and finesse is my artistic approach.
‘Heimat und Ferne’ (meaning Home and Far Away) was created in 2011. Photo: Horst Holberg.
What is your favourite tool or piece of equipment and why?
For me, gravity is the most important instrument for glassblowing. Since I try to engage in a dialogue with the material, I am forced to work with gravity and not perceive it as an enemy.
‘Cerebral No 54’.
Do you have a favourite piece you have made? Why is it your favourite?
I cannot say that I favour one work, as they are usually part of a larger theme, and each piece has its justification and purpose within that. The overarching themes I deal with usually influence each other and overlap.
An installation of ‘Polymorphine’.
Where do you show and sell your work?
Occasionally, I showcase my work in various group exhibitions. I am also a member of the artist collective ‘Glassjam’, which organises exhibitions once or twice a year. Most of my sales happen through these exhibitions. Additionally, I am represented by The Artling gallery in Singapore.
Currently, my works are on display at the LWL Museum Glashütte Gernheim in the exhibition ‘Kunst, Handwerk, Erbe’ (Art, Craft, Heritage), which is on until 22 September 2024.
Display at the 2024 Glass Art Society conference at Monopol in Berlin, Germany.
Where is your glass practice heading next?
Since I started my art studies, more and more other materials and techniques like metal, 3D printing, drawing and video have been incorporated into my work, so it is evolving more towards expansive installations. I can further enhance the potential of glass by processing and using appropriate and complementary materials and media. This allows me to stage the object in a lively construct and contextualise it.
My next goal is to place multiple laboratory glass-like glass objects into an immersive setting, playing with scale and flipping the serious nature of scientific glass by introducing a sense of mischief.
About the artist
Markus Marschmann with work in progress. Photo: Masami Hirohata.
Markus Marschmann was born in 1992 in Eggenfelden, Germany. He completed three apprenticeships as a scientific glassblower, artistic glassblower and glassmaker.
In 2012 he was awarded best scientific glassblower in Germany at the Glasfachschule Zwiesel (glass school).
Since 2011, he has run his own studio and led and supported numerous hot shop and lampwork workshops and projects as a teaching assistant at Bild-Werk in Frauenau.
In 2021, he began studying Fine Art at the Institute for artistic Ceramic and Glass Hochschule Koblenz.
Find out more about Markus Marschmann via his website.
Main feature image: ‘Cerebral No.68’ is an example of Markus Marschmann’s organic forms captured in a vase shape. All photos by the artist unless stated otherwise.
Thanks to the huge generosity of Richard Glass from Teign Valley Glass (TVG), we have not one but four lucky winners of the CGS 2024 Amanda Moriarty Memorial Prize.
Four applicants made the shortlist to win a five-day residency at the Devon studio, but Richard Glass kindly decided to provide each of them with the prize!
The winning artists are Emma Baker, Theo Brooks, Laura Kriefman and Maria Zulueta.
Based on a farm in Somerset, Emma Baker has worked with glass for over 10 years. Her inspiration comes from the events experienced throughout life; why are some moments profound and others unmemorable? Partnered with a passion for learning and understanding the material, her works explore materiality with a sentimental narrative.
During the residency, her aim is to produce a new body of work of blown glass pieces that show the documentation of how glass behaves when an imbalance of heat occurs due to the introduction of colour.
Emma commented, “I’m incredibly excited to be a recipient of this prize and hugely grateful for the generosity of TVG and CGS.”
Emma Baker’s ‘Torsion’ series.
Theo Brooks is a British Cypriot glass maker from London. Brooks’ contemporary reinventions of important ancient Cypriot artefacts as sculptures and installations is his passion and his way of representing his culture. Alongside this, he blends his two cultures into the aesthetics of his objects, taking visual inspiration from growing up in south London.
Brooks wishes to expand on a current body of work by experimenting with new forms and pieces, with the assistance of the TVG team. He is excited to make connections within the glass community and honour the spirit of the memorial award.
‘Mediatory’ by Theo Brooks.
Laura Kriefman is an award-winning choreographer and artist with over 20 years’ experience obsessing about movement and colour. Her work has been featured worldwide, including at the Venice Biennale, and she has been awarded numerous prestigious international fellowships. Now moving into a career as a professional stained glass artist working at industrial and ‘art’ scale, Laura is reflecting her love of colour and movement into the flow and precision of glass work (see main image). She is aiming to learn to make contemporary roundels and blown sheet glass, moving past the classic stained glass artist’s understanding of glass and into a hybrid place of being able to make her own sheet glass.
Maria Zulueta’s dedication to promoting excellence in glasswork has been unwavering as an artist, educator, researcher and practitioner. Specialising in kiln-formed glass, casting and printing techniques, she engages in a continuous exploration of materials and processes with intuition and curiosity. During the residency, she aims to blend traditional craft elements with modern artistic expression, using hot glass, casting and Pate de Verre to create visually stunning and conceptually rich sculptural pieces inspired by nature and human relationships, with a focus on change and ecological awareness.
Maria Zulueta’s work continuously explores materials and processes.
All of the winners will be writing up their residency experiences in due course.
The Amanda Moriarty Prize was set up in 2017 to commemorate Amanda Moriarty, a long-serving Board member and Honorary Treasurer of the CGS, who passed away. To celebrate her enthusiasm and encouragement of glassmaking, CGS offers this annual prize in her memory.
Main image: Detail of ‘Framed on a Train’ by Laura Kriefman.
Worcester Cathedral has teamed up with Stourbridge-based glass artist Allister Malcolm to design an exclusive special edition of individually hand-crafted pieces to remember and celebrate lost loved ones.
Designed to be symbolic and poignant permanent reminders that the memory of loved ones lives on forever, these Perpetual Flame pieces are for sale in support of the Cathedral. Each Flame is unique and made using Allister’s signature style of hot sculpting techniques, encasing cane work, glittering gold and colour.
Allister explained, “I really enjoy working on projects that allow our glass to be appreciated by different audiences. It was an honour to be approached to develop something unique for the Cathedral. The idea of creating something inspired by the process of lighting a votive really appealed to me.”
The Interim Dean of Worcester, The Reverend Canon Dr Stephen Edwards, said: “Every day, in the Cathedral, hundreds of candles are lit as a sign of prayer, remembrance and thanksgiving. Lighting a candle in memory of someone we have loved and lost is a meaningful way to remember and honour their life and the time we spent with them.”
The Cathedral’s fundraising director, Cathy Sloan, commented, “We are so excited to be working with Allister, whose work can be seen in galleries worldwide. Allister is well-known for his glass art and for his appearances as a mentor on the TV series Make It at Market. Allister also shares our passion for the environment and sustainability, making him the perfect partner for this project, as his studio moves towards increasingly sustainable practices.”
A selection of the limited edition Perpetual Flame pieces are currently on display in the Cathedral’s Nave for visitors to enjoy.
For more details about purchasing a Flame, click here.
Worcester Cathedral is at 8 College Yard, Worcester, Worcestershire, WR1 2LA, UK.
Over 50 pieces of engraved glass will be on display at The World of Glass in St Helen’s, Merseyside, from 6 July until 31 August 2024.
This international showcase is presented by members of the Guild of Glass Engravers, who are exhibiting at this new glass venue for the first time. The Guild’s primary aims are to promote the highest standards of creative design and craftsmanship in glass engraving.
Exhibits range from the miniscule to life size, using various engraving techniques and styles, which highlight the skill and creativity involved in being a glass engraver.
Artists taking part include Chris Ainslie, FGE, Theo Brooks, Sue Burne, Katharine Coleman, Herbie Davies, James Denison Pender, FGE, Janice Denley, Junko Eager, Dominic Fondé, FGE, Christine Hook, Ami Kitsuda, FGE, Kate Kyne, Peter Lightowler, Deborah MacDonald, Vivienne Marshall, Rob Page, Nicholas Rutherford, FGE, and Sandra Snaddon, FGE.
The work on display is available to buy from the gallery staff.
The 2024 Guild of Glass Engravers International Exhibition is at: The World of Glass, Chalon Way East, St Helens WA10 1BX, UK.
The World of Glass is open 10:00am-4:00pm (closed Mondays, Bank Holidays and most Sundays) and admission is free. Website: https://www.worldofglass.com/
Find out more about the Guild of Glass Engravers here.
The 2024 Stained Glass Association of America (SGAA) conference, ‘Sand to Sash’ takes place in Kansas City, Missouri, US, from 2-6 October and registration is open for the conference, plus associated workshops, tours and educational sessions.
The organisers say that the ‘Sand to Sash’ theme aims to explore glass from conception to sheet to final installation and beyond, with numerous exciting opportunities to engage with the material in new ways.
This year’s conference is hosted by Monarch Studio and Tyler Kimball, with co-hosts Andrea Denning of Denning Stained Glass and Kathy Barnard of Kathy Barnard Studio.
The hotel is central to the entire programme, located just a few minutes from most of the workshop locations and evening events. All SGAA members receive discounted registration and first access to workshops and seminars.
On 2 and 3 October there will be workshops, seminars, tours, plus an evening of live demonstrations at the Monarch Hot Shop. On 4 October there will be over a dozen presentations about framing, tools, equipment and materials. Then, during the General Session on 5 October, there will be presentations, lectures and panels covering everything from business insurance to stained glass history and major recent installations.
Stained glass workshops will offer hands-on creative sessions for all skill levels and include glass painting, rondel making, fusing, slumping, sandblasting and more.
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