Cutting-Edge Art
Art glass usually refers to the modern art glass
movement in which individual artists work alone or with
colleagues, creating works from molten glass in relatively small
furnaces of a few hundred pounds of glass. It began in the early
1960s and showed an incremental growth through the end of the
century. The glass objects created are not primarily
utilitarian. From a creative perspective, they have to make an
artistic statement. Their market value depends on the work and
the artist involved, and prices range from a few hundred to tens
of thousands of dollars. The best known of the modern glass
artists is Dale Chihuly. In 1971, he began the Pilchuck School
of Glass near Stanwood, Washington, which is a source of a great
deal of the current American Studio Glass movement.
In an art glass studio, "production work" (goblets, vases,
pitchers, art marbles etc.) show more hand worked variation than
was allowed in a pure factory work environment, and each piece
shows some of the lead glass worker's creativity. In addition to
smaller production pieces, the studio glass workers also try to
turn out larger individual pieces, which might be the equivalent
of a work of genius in the journeyman system of guild and
factory work.
Glass Blowing might be an ancient art but there
has been a resurgence in the relatively recent "studio glass
movement" which began in 1962. Harvey Littleton, a ceramics
professor, and Dominick Labino, a chemist and engineer, held two
workshops at the Toledo Museum of Art, during which they began
experimenting with melting glass in a small furnace and creating
blown glass art. Littleton and Labino were the first to make
molten glass available to artists working in private studios.
This approach to glass blowing blossomed into a worldwide
movement, producing such flamboyant and prolific artists as Dale
Chihuly and Dante Marioni. Lino Tagliapietraa was the first
Murano-trained artist to leave and spread his knowledge in the
United States.
Philip Johnson's Glass House may be one of the
least functional homes on the planet but on an architectural
scale, it is one of the most beautiful. All the exterior walls
are glass, with the surrounding vegetation as audience. Johnson
did not see the house so much as a stage... but as a statement.
The inspiration and basic concept for Johnson's glass house came
from Mies van der Rohe, who was designing the glass-and-steel
Farnsworth House during this period. Also surrounded by a green
landscape, the house stands utterly transparent with its
glass-enclosed living space and porch. On a conceptual level,
the house is the perfect expression of International Style. Both
houses are simple in structure but it is the use of glass as the
main material, which makes these houses highly significant in
the world of architecture.
Fritography is the art of using crushed glass
pieces ("frits") and coloured glass powders to create fused
glass artwork. Artists assemble the frits into patterns that can
be highly detailed, and even photo-realistic, and then fuse the
works in a kiln. Seattle artist, Michael Dupille, pioneered the
process. This glass artist works in Seattle, Washington. While
he has worked in numerous media, he is widely regarded as a
pioneer in the technique of fritography, or kiln-fused
glasswork. His public work is on display throughout the United
States, including a major installation in New York City's Wall
Street Park.