Big congrats to WGS alum
Jeff Zimmer! Jeff is arguably one of the
most successful artists from the Washington
Glass School. Jeff was a teaching assistant here at the Glass School,
and he went to the UK – to Edinburgh, obtaining a Masters degree in glass painting there
in Scotland,
where he currently lives. The Victoria and Albert Museum
(V&A), London,
is the world's largest museum of decorative arts and design, housing a permanent
collection of over 4.5 million objects.
The piece is called "To See Ourselves As Others See Us." It was made as half of a pair (the other titled "Ae Fareweel, Alas, Forever") made for an exhibition titled "Cultural Exchange" organized by the Scottish Glass Society, curated by Mieke Groot and which took place at NorthLands Creative Glass during their conference last year, which is where Reino Liefkes, Senior Curator of Ceramics and Glass at the V&A saw the artwork.
Jeff Zimmer 'To See
Ourselves As Others See Us', enameled and sandblasted glass (mounted on LED), 27"w
x 21"h x 7"d, 2012
|
The piece is called "To See Ourselves As Others See Us." It was made as half of a pair (the other titled "Ae Fareweel, Alas, Forever") made for an exhibition titled "Cultural Exchange" organized by the Scottish Glass Society, curated by Mieke Groot and which took place at NorthLands Creative Glass during their conference last year, which is where Reino Liefkes, Senior Curator of Ceramics and Glass at the V&A saw the artwork.
Jeff describes his work in
the exhibit catalog text :
As an immigrant, I am
sensitive to political and social discussions of immigration. Every country experiences the same
anxieties. People want to retain a
perceived essence of place and culture, but rarely consider the effects on
other cultures of their own desires to travel, emigrate and trade. The legacy
of emigration is a large part of the Scottish psyche, and the ‘Highland
Clearances’ are among the most well known and emotive aspects of Scottish
history…
'To See Ourselves As Others
See Us,' rescales the monumental homesick family from George W. Simpsons's
iconic panting 'A Coronach In The Woods' in a broader frame so the impact they
have had on the lands that they colonized -- often by squatting -- can be
glimpsed: felled trees, austere and uncompromising religion (the church on the
outcrop referencing the notion of 'the city on the hill') and a reputation for
drunken disorderliness. The title is a quote from Scottish national bard Robert
Burns' poem 'To A Louse'.
Singer Amanda Palmer (of the Dreseden Dolls) and Jeff Zimmer in Edinburgh. |
Washington Post Article by Michael O'Sullivan Thursday, May 26, 2011 |
In 2011, Jeff was one the artists participating in the Washington Glass School 10th Anniversary exhibit held at Longview Gallery. The Washington Post art critic wrote about the show, singling out Jeff's work as artwork that "fires up" imagination. It is great to see friends do so well in their passion and career!
Congratulations Jeff Zimmer!
1 comment:
Doesn't he work really well with glass? I think it'd be pretty cool to get some awesome glasswork for my house in Cambridge.
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