Studio Glass in The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Studio Glass in The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Adlin, Jane
1996
32 pages
30 illustrations
8.5 x 11 in
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In 1961 and 1962 artist Harvey K. Littleton, a professor of fine arts at the University of Wisconsin and son of the director of research at the Corning Glass Works, held a series of informal workshops to explore the art of hot glassmaking in a studio setting. Until then, almost without exception, glass objects had been blown or molded in an industrial context—that is, they were factory made. In the 1870s, the French designer Émile Gallé had made a radical change in the prevailing attitude toward glass as art by being the first modern artist to sign his work, just as painters and sculptors did. Nevertheless, art glass continued to be blown in factories, such as Orrefors in Sweden, Tiffany in the United States, and Lalique in France.

In the 1960s, Littleton became convinced, after visiting a few European glassmakers working alone, that an artist could maintain a complete glassmaking facility within a studio; thanks to his determination and the creation of a low-melting glass formula by artist Dominick Labino, the studio glass movement was born.

Progress was so swift that when, a decade later, The Metropolitan Museum of Art established a department devoted to the arts of the twentieth century, its curators sought out not only the innovative glass art of Harvey Littleton and Dominick Labino, but also the work of such emerging artists as Dale Chihuly, Michael Glancy, and Jon Kuhn. Glass art had arrived.

During the 1970s, in both Europe and the United States, the liberal political and social climate encouraged a new freedom in artistic expression. Artists who wanted to work in the medium of glass could take courses in colleges and universities and even graduate with a degree in glassmaking. Dale Chihuly, whose masterworks in glass and remarkable enthusiasm helped establish glass in the art world, founded the Pilchuck School near Seattle, devoted solely to the making of glass art and to teaching the various techniques available to artists.

Experiments in abstract sculpture gave way to narrative works and assemblages that often conveyed a personal message. Erwin Eisch, working in Bavaria, engraved and painted his glass portrait heads of Picasso and Buddha with images expressing the horrors of war. Ginny Ruffner explored the women's liberation movement and the history of art through her lamp-worked sculptures.

Artists no longer had to rely on the glass industry to create unique masterpieces of glass art. Thomas Patti's brilliant experiments with fused plate glass, Howard Ben Tré's heroic work in large-scale molded-glass sculpture, Mary Shaffer's sensuous slumped glass and metalwork, and William Morris's virtuoso forms with their evocation of the past attest to the virtually limitless opportunities now available to studio artists.

"Damaged Bone Series", Michael Aschenbrenner  American, Glass, fabric, wire, twigs
Michael Aschenbrenner
1990
Siphon, Howard Ben Tré  American, Glass, brass, gold leaf, pigmented waxes
Howard Ben Tré
1989
Kinesthesis bottle, William Carlson  American, Glass with silver gilt
William Carlson
1981
Wedge Weave, Dale Chihuly  American, Glass
Dale Chihuly
1976
Metallic Serape, Dale Chihuly  American, Glass
Dale Chihuly
1977
Child's Bayeta on Peach, Dale Chihuly  American, Glass
Dale Chihuly
1977
Pilchuck Basket Group, Dale Chihuly  American, Glass
Dale Chihuly
1979–80
City Series: Stars and Skyline, Dan Dailey  American, Glass
Dan Dailey
1979
Hommage à Picasso:  Blind and Lost, Erwin Eisch  German, Glass
Erwin Eisch
1985
Vase, Samuel J. Herman  American, born Mexico, Glass
Samuel J. Herman
1967
Leitungs Scherben #LS 1082, David R. Huchthausen  American, Glass
David R. Huchthausen
1982
Vase, Hisatoshi Iwata  Japanese, Glass, gilding
Hisatoshi Iwata
1979
Vase, Toshichi Iwata  Japanese, Glass
Toshichi Iwata
Iwata Glass Co., Ltd.
ca. 1975–76
Vase, Jon Kuhn  American, Glass
Jon Kuhn
1980
Emergence in Polychrome, Dominick Labino  American, Glass
Dominick Labino
1977
Gold Wing Vessel, John Lewis  American, Glass, gold leaf and copper alloy
John Lewis
1993
Table Laid for a Bride, Stanislav Libensky  Czech, Cast safrin glass
Stanislav Libensky
Jaroslava Brychtová
1989
IGS III Series #1, 1988–93, Novy Bor, Czechoslovakia, Marvin Lipofsky  American, Glass
Marvin Lipofsky
1988–93
Amber Crested Form, Harvey K. Littleton  American, Glass
Harvey K. Littleton
1976
Double Doll on Blue, Flora Mace  American, Glass, wire, sand grains (confined to a small circular area on bottom)
Flora Mace
Joey Kirkpatrick
1983
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