Part 4 of 5
Tim Tate / Glass / US |
Tim Tate is a Washington, DC
native, and has been working with glass as a sculptural medium for the past 25
years. Co-Founder of the Washington Glass School,
Tim’s work is in the permanent collections of a number of museums, including
the Smithsonian's American Art Museum, Renwick Gallery and the Mint Museum.
He was awarded the title of “Rising Star of the 21st Century” from the Museum of American Glass and was also the
recipient of the 2009 Virginia Groot Foundation award for sculpture. His work
has been shown at the Milwaukee Art Museum, the Fuller
Museum, the Asheville
Art Museum and the Museum of Arts and
Design in New York.
He is a 2012 Fulbright Scholar recipient at Sunderland
University in England.
Inge Paneels / Glass / UK |
Inge Panneels has been
designing and making architectural or sculptural glass pieces since 1998. Inspiration
for her work is driven by location and circumstance and life’s rich tapestry a
recurrent theme. Inge is originally from Belgium
now lives and works in the Scottish Borders but works throughout the UK. Inge also
lectures part time at the Glass and Ceramics Department of the University of Sunderland.
A body of sculptural work
exploring mapping is emerging; such as “Liverpool Map (2011) commission for the
Museum of Liverpool,
with new work being developed inspired by residencies at Mercator
Museum (Belgium) and Jedburgh Abbey in
2012, to be completed in 2013.Nancy Donnelly / Glass / US |
Nancy Donnelly is a studio
artist at the Washington
Glass School.
She makes 2- and 3-dimensional art glass using color and imagery drawn from her
painter’s training. Her work can be seen at Foundry Gallery and elsewhere in
the Washington
area.
Philippa Whiteside / Ceramics / UK |
Philippa Whiteside graduated
from Sunderland University in 2010 with a BA Hons in
Glass and Ceramics. She was awarded a 12 month scholarship with Creative
Cohesion, supported by Sunderland City Council. In May 2011, Philippa was elected
Director of Creative Cohesion where she now runs her ceramic studio. Philippa
expores her fascination with lettering and words, and often combines ceramics with
textile decoration and texture.
Allegra Marquart / Glass / US |
Allegra Marquart came to Baltimore, Maryland
in 1976 to teach printmaking at the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA).
Gradually she became recognized for her narrative imagery that revolves around
the joys, absurdities and surprises of human experience. Her prints are held in
collections including the Zimmerli
Art Museum, the Baltimore
Museum of Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Huntsville Museum of Art.
In 2001 she began to explore the possibilities of realizing her images in
glass. Allegra began interpreting old stories and intricately rendering them on
colorful glass panels. Her glass work was represented in a recent contemporary
glass art exhibition at the Museum
of American Glass at
Wheaton Arts. One of her glass towers is also in the collection of the National
Institute of Health in DC.
Stephen Beardsell / Glass / UK |
Stephen Beardsell graduated
from the University
of Sunderland achieving
an MA in glass 2006 and BA in glass and ceramics 2001. Working in sculpture for the past 17
years, Stephen creates mixed media sculptures that sit comfortably in the
natural environment without conflicting with their immediate surroundings. Stephen
crafts his glass artwork employing many techniques, including blown glass, hot
sculpting, and hot casting into sand or graphite moulds, kiln form glass. He
recently kiln cast the largest singular piece of glass in the UK - a large oval
red lens weighing 350kg (770 lbs), cast in a Czech glass.
Ani Kasten / Ceramics / US |
Ani Kasten has been working
in the ceramic medium since 2000, beginning with an apprenticeship with British
ceramist Rupert Spira. After a year in England,
Ani traveled to Kathmandu, Nepal where she spent four years as head of a
project for developing stoneware technology for a community of artisan potters
in the village of
Thimi. Her training in England and the exotic working environment in Nepal have infused Ani’s sculptural vessels with
a combined aesthetic, drawing on minimalist British studio ceramics, as well as
ancient, weathered, hand-made objects born from traditional cultures throughout
Asia. After leaving Nepal,
Ani began working in Oakland, California
where the fresh natural beauty of the California
coastline juxtaposed with extreme urban deterioration began to inform the
language of her work. From 2007 through 2009, Ani was an Artist in Residence at
Red Dirt Studio in Mt. Rainier,
MD, where she worked closely with
ceramic artist Margaret Boozer, and further developed her distinct combination
of sculpture and vessel work, showing her ceramics nationally at galleries and
craft shows.
Click Here to jump to US / UK Artist Profile - Part 2
Click Here to jump to US / UK Artist Profile - Part 3
There will be a "Day of Demos" by a number of the visiting UK artists - Saturday, March 2, 2013.
Criss Chaney "Vessel" |
11:00 AM at the Washington Glass School, UK-based glass artists Criss Chaney and Robyn Townsend will demonstrate using
metal wire and sheet inclusions into cast glass, and painting a layer of metal
powders onto the inside mould surface. They will also demonstrate cold
techniques for applying metals to a finished piece of glass, and options for
patination using common household chemicals. Click HERE to reserve a space at this free demo.
2:00 PM at DC GlassWorks, superstar UK hot glass artists Phil Vickery, Colin Rennie and Roger Tye will show how they work. Click HERE to reserve a space at the free demo.
2:00 PM at DC GlassWorks, superstar UK hot glass artists Phil Vickery, Colin Rennie and Roger Tye will show how they work. Click HERE to reserve a space at the free demo.
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