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A New Renaissance in Glass Art
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10133 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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8 / 1986 |
2,055 Words |
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Robert Kehlmann Robert Kehlmann is an arts writer residing in Berkeley,
California. |
Glass is so much a part of our everyday lives that we scarcely notice it while reading the time, waiting for a traffic light, or pouring a drink. Every day we generally see and touch hundreds of pieces of glass - windows in buildings and automobiles, plates, TV screens, jars, cooking utensils, eyeglass. It is used so extensively in our technological age that we've been conditioned to overlook it.
A group of artists today, however, are reinvesting glass with the fascination and mystery it had for the early Romans or the Christian artisans who glazed the windows of vast cathedrals in medieval times. Their works, rather than focusing on technological advances which have made glass "invisible" to us, make the viewers aware of its unique and often sensuous qualities.
Two recent exhibitions in California have successfully documented the current renaissance in glass art which is taking place both in the United States and abroad. The Downey Museum of Art in Southern California sponsored a Glass Art National (March 27-May 9), and the Oakland Museum in the northern part of the state is currently showing, through August 24, Contemporary American and European Glass from the collection of Bay Area collectors George and Dorothy Saxe. Taken as a pair, these exhibitions provide interesting insights into some of the reasons glass, as a medium for artistic expression, has begun to attract so much attention.
Objects selected for the Downey Glass Art National were juried from slides submitted by artists throughout the United States as well as Canada and Mexico. From the 601 slides entered by 178 artists, 36 objects made by 25 artists were included in the
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