I write this article in an effort to change your thinking about contemporary glass art. In the following pages, I compare and contrast the changes that 50 years of Studio Glass have produced. My beliefs come from my focus on the artist retreat models, such as Penland, Pilchuck, Corning, Haystack, Etc. This focus was a result of not being in academia. I did not have the resources that would allow me to pursue an MFA. My energies were thrust upon those institutions that catered to working artists. These art retreats were my training ground.
The evidence supporting my claims comes mostly from my own
experiences and observations as a practicing sculptural glass artist, including
10 years showing only in sculptural fine art settings and then crossing over to
the glass gallery world. At this point, I straddle the line between these
worlds. Half the galleries that represent my work are glass galleries, half are
fine art galleries.
My premise is that to succeed in glass in the 21st
century, we have to secede from 20th Century founded Studio Glass. The
Studio Glass model was firmly in place. It was time to integrate into the Fine Art World. What we needed was a
bridge between these two worlds, to assist in this transition which was coming
so very quickly.
"Glass Secessionism" is firmly rooted in the historical precedent of Photo Secession, and that movement provides a template for organizing our nascent movement. Like the Photo Secession, we are moving away from the technique-dominated culture of studio glass. We respect good technique, and understand its importance in creating great art from glass. However, we believe that great art should be driven primarily by artistic vision, and technique should facilitate the vision. For too long, technique has driven the majority of studio glass. As Secessionists we do not seek to isolate ourselves from other artists working in glass, but to enhance the field as a whole.
“Glass Secessionism”, a Facebook page, was created to be an accessible venue for the
showing, discussion and definition of secessionist works. Works that are based
in mixed media and time base electronics for example. Its objective is to
advance glass as applied to sculptural expression; to draw together those glass
artists practicing or otherwise interested in the arts, and to discuss specific
examples of the Glass-Secession or other narrative work.
As I've said, this movement is modeled after Alfred Stieglitz and the Photo-Secessionists and how they redefined photography.
As I've said, this movement is modeled after Alfred Stieglitz and the Photo-Secessionists and how they redefined photography.
Though they may seem incomparable, there are distinct similarities between Photo-secessionism and Glass Secessionism. Both mediums emerged from the lab/factory with high technical barriers inherent in the materials. We applauded the genius required to make something from the chemistry/fire/darkrooms/furnaces/ environment, and some of the early pioneers had a vested interest in keeping secrets and making adaptation by artists difficult. Both mediums were born of science and industry, and both had similar paths of evolution as a result.
In 1902 Stieglitz announced the existence of a new organization called the Photo-Secession, a group dedicated to promoting photography as an art form. The name of the group suggested that it was designed to break away from stodgy and conventional ideas. |
In many ways, I agree with Stieglitz’s deeply critical view of what he understood to be the rampant conventionality, conformity, and institutionalization of the photography field in the early 20th century. It was said that Steigletz wanted to secede from “artwork that had gone stale through the copying of Victorian, conventional styles, but more importantly from the dictatorship of the entrenched institutions, galleries, art schools and professional art organizations that enforced or at very least sanctioned copying or imitation." In my perhaps isolated world this seemed to hold great similarity to what I saw happening in glass in the beginning of the 21st century. I saw it, but those artists still involved heavily in that aesthetic seemed not to.
The modern history of glass is unfolding before our eyes. Before glass became more accessible in this country, you usually had to work in a glass production factory to have contact with glass. Slowly, in the 60's and 70's, schools and individuals started to proliferate and glass began to emerge to a larger population to experiment with. In those early days, American glass artists seemed to have an insecurity regarding our place in the glass world, so there was a huge focus on Venetian blowing techniques. This focus was perhaps more in the artists retreats than MFA programs, which produced many exceptions. RISD seemed to lead the way in idea driven glass, but most people did not learn glass from the MFA programs. Glass Secessionism seems to be driven not just by MFA programs but from younger artists looking for a voice of their own, not connected to a distinct glass history. I believe most learned in small studios and artists retreats, just as I did.
As more people got exposed to glass, things began to
progress. By the 80's and the early 90's we not only became as good in
technique as the Venetians, it seemed we frequently surpassed them. There were
some amazing stand-out artists who had mastered technique, then took that
technique and developed compelling narrative sculptural work. There were far
more who focused on perfecting that technique in the Venetian tradition and
focused primarily on vessels and the indirect narrative implied within the
material. This is a viable and valuable path, if that was your interest and hot
glass was readily available to you. The closest hot glass available outside of
academia to me was Penland School of Crafts. Accordingly, during this same time
period, schools like Pilchuck and
Penland mostly focused on teaching hot glass classes and techniques, as it is
much less concrete to teach ideas.
However, many began
to push the reigning concepts and methods further. In many MFA programs the insecurity of
exploration was gone, replaced by a desire to take glass further—to not be the
second best goblet maker, as so many had in the previous period of Venetian
technical hegemony.
Garth Clark at the 2008 lecture. |
The person who made the most sense to me was Garth Clark. In his now infamous 2008 lecture at the Portland Museum of Contemporary Craft, he finally voiced what I had felt for sometime: that the arts and craft movement, having reigned for 150 years, died forever in the mid 1990's. It died of "art envy.” No one wanted to be a craftsman anymore...everyone wanted to be an artist.Add to this the fact that in the 1990's collectors and galleries remained tied to a type, price point, and aesthetic.
Catalog of "Compelled by Content" |
By 2005, there was a small but intellectually and aesthetically exciting group
of artists producing narrative work, many of it showcased in a
show I curated entitled, “Compelled by Content.” This conceptually derived focus seems to be a central part of what I term “Glass Secessionism.”
I define this as ideas and concepts that exist autonomously
from their own materiality. There were a few magnificent examples of newer artists using narrative.
(narrative artists such as Christina Bothwell, Michael Rogers, Carmen Lozar, De
La Torre Brothers, Susan Taylor Glasgow, etc). These were the types of artists
I looked up to. Even within artist retreat venues, these artists were a
minority and rare. But at least I felt there were others like me.
Glass artists began to move
out of their disciplinary confines and began draw from multiple media and
disciplines. One group that also seceded
was the Hyperopia Projects. They summed this movement up by writing that, “…we
do not fit comfortably into glass, sculpture or new media, but draw from all of them. Our interests and practices are between disciplines
and media. We seek to support a longer view of where glass is headed—where the
identity of glass may be intermingled with the larger world of contemporary
art. Our efforts are also a direct call to action for our peers
to continue paving this path—dissolving and redrawing our boundaries along the
way”. Many artists around the country were coming to this same realization. There had certainly been other attempts to find a model out of Studio Glass.
By the 21st century, warm glass and kiln forming had found
its following. Formerly frequently dismissed as the art form of non-serious
hobbyists, many great narrative sculptors were emerging.
These days in MFA programs around the country, you are unlikely to find a technique driven glass artist.....if you can even find anyone who still calls themselves a glass artist. Mixed media, conceptual and performance dominate those artists, and also dominate many private schools such as ours....and certainly other private artists as well.
These days in MFA programs around the country, you are unlikely to find a technique driven glass artist.....if you can even find anyone who still calls themselves a glass artist. Mixed media, conceptual and performance dominate those artists, and also dominate many private schools such as ours....and certainly other private artists as well.
The problems began when I tried to exhibit work, and it wasn’t just glass galleries.
I would knock on doors of fine art galleries and museums at the time, to show them my work. They all said similar things. The work is great, but its glass. The Smithsonian Hirshhorn Museum even had a curator that had a "no glass" policy. They would continually send me back to the glass galleries, who would say "You can have the most spectacular work of glass ever made, but if you don’t have a reputation, my collectors won't buy it.” (an actual quote). I was caught in a difficult place, as many 21st glass sculptors were. Fine art galleries were frequently not showing glass; and glass galleries were frequently not showing emerging glass sculptors.
What was an artist supposed to do? When I mentioned my frustration to Paul Parkman, a noted glass enthusiast and founder of many glass organizations, he said, "Well... if they are not noticing your work, do something they can't ignore". This became my mantra. As Bill T Jones once said; “Art is what is made when you push back.” The artists who originally founded Studio Glass pushed back in their time. Now it was my turn. I believed that for glass to be taken seriously in the broader fine art world, then we had to secede. Only by seceding would we succeed. If the glass world wasn’t going to recognize us, then what choice did we have?
There are a number of facets of the glass world I purposefully seceded from:
· A technique driven glass world. A vessel-centric dialogue.
· The dominance of 40 artists who began studio glass, but frequently stagnated into replication or were knocked off so frequently that it was hard to tell the knock off from the original. I was in awe of many of these magnificent artists, but also saw many great artists who received little or no recognition.
· The continual tedious discussion of the faulty “art vs craft” binary.
· To yet another magazine cover of the same glass artists again and again. (not that they didn’t deserve them…I just felt that others did as well). The predictability of who I would see inside, who would curate, show, and applaud the art. To see yet another variation of a select few artists work and their view of the world.
· From the way glass was discussed, thought about, collected, made, exhibited, and seen around the world.
· From the absence of 21st century technologies, including video, electronics, digital art and time based media and art forms .
One of the major reasons I seceded was to embrace, mentor, and nurture younger artists breaking new ground. I understand this to be encouraging new directions of glass outside the traditional craft world. To embrace what I saw beginning to happen with so many younger and perhaps unrecognized artists; that they were not taken as seriously as the established artists.
This has been taken as disrespect. Nothing could be further from the truth. I grew up as an artist in that glass world. I have nothing but respect and admiration for those amazing artists who founded the Studio Glass movement. We all stand upon their shoulders.
In this country, collectors seemed to drive the movement. When an artist came up with a form that some people liked, the collector consciousness wanted them. An artist was frequently in a position that if they wanted to economically succeed, he or she had to replicate a particular form with subtle variations over and over. Collectors and the institutions that controlled the studio glass movement unconsciously stifled artistic exploration and creativity while also encouraging other aspects. So different from the glass artists in other countries.
If the economics of Studio Glass had not taken over, I believe even the great founders would have experimented more themselves. Would Toots Zynsky have made variations of the same bowl form for so many decades? After seeing her RISD work from 40 years ago, I doubt it. I mean no disrespect towards Toots. I love her work and am just using this as an example to make what I believe to be a salient point. However, such a contention is often interpreted as disrespect. Does daring to question the established base automatically imply disrespect?
Toots Zynsky, 1990 Toots Zynsky 2010 |
It should be kept remembered that the founders of studio were certainly secessionists in their own times and in their own right.
Does this mean that we no longer value Studio Glass or Post Studio Glass (work that builds on the techniques and aesthetics of 20th century vessels)? Not at all. There will always be a place for these wondrous objects and their makers. I am suggesting that they will not figure as prominently in the 21st century as in the 20th century. I know this makes people very angry. That is certainly not my intent. I am merely trying to map the landscape of shifts that characterize the contemporary post-modern glass world. As more shifts occur, the less likely it will be that our current Studio Glass and Post-Studio Glass frames of reference will maintain the authority they still have in the current period.
By the 2000’s the preponderance of work within those venues shifted, until there was now much more secessionist type work than vessel-related or technique-driven work. This shift was perhaps led by the MFA programs, but embraced by younger artists in every setting. There you would be hard pressed to find anyone working in vessel forms or willing to call themselves a glass artist. Perhaps this new type of self-identity was the cause. A new identity began to appear—or rather, the old identity of "glass artist" began to erode. The new identity took on an anti-identity facet—it refused to be pinned down by schools or mediums or forms. I believe this is a part of the secessionist movement.
So,
What are the boundaries of Glass Secessionism?
·
It
is not studio glass, though there were many roots and seeds of this movement found
in studio glass.
·
Glass
tends to be only one component in a mixed media sculpture.
·
It
is not in the form of a vessel.
·
Time-based
media involving glass will become more and more important as technology
continues to progress. Time based media such as sound, video, performance. As
electronics improve and become readily available, including software
development, this glass art form will flourish.
·
Large-scale
conceptual installations. These
conceptual installations will also gain prominence in the museum world. The
production of space—rather than the mere filling of it or accommodation to
it—is a distinctive conceptual shift from the Glass Studio period.
·
It
tends to start with an idea or concept rather than perfecting or exploring a
technique.
·
Is
not in the form of abstract expressionism.
·
Glass Secessionism reconfigures performance.
Performance art in the Studio Glass era was about the drama
of the artist making work in the studio. Performance art in the Secessionist era usually starts with an idea
other than the making of an object. This will be one of the fastest growing
areas of Glass Ssecessionism; mostly due to fact that advances in video technology and
social media allows for almost instant records of performance to be shared,
distributed and discussed.
· Glass Secessionism
takes place within, and often actively supports, the increasing erosion of the
ownership of art, according to William Warmus on this topic. Objects were made to be exhibited and collected in the studio
glass era. In the Secessionist era, while there will still be a love of well
made objects, some objects will be considered the property of the collective
culture. They will be reproduced digitally, shared, float around, come together
as an exhibition or collection, split apart. This will challenge the artist as
to how to make a living, and museums will have to reconsider the idea of
ownership. This is not just in the glass world, but in the art world as a
whole. This will be particularly true of performance.
·
Architecture
is increasingly an important component of secessionism. However, the technical expertise and expert
knowledge it requires will make collecting it, or even talking about it, will
remain problematic and awkward. For example, most people do not know how to
read floor plans. In this way,
secessionism has an internal contradiction: while it becomes increasingly
accessible in many other ways, it also assumes sculptural and architectural
elements which require certain types of technical knowledge and skill. Another point made by William Warmus.
·
It
tends to include a focus on narrative. I
define narrative as ideas and concepts that exist autonomously from their own
materiality.
Where are we going? Let me
suggest museum and gallery shows that would fit squarely into the 21st
Century and embrace the aesthetics of Glass Secessionism.
Museum shows :
Figurative
Glass Dialogs in the 21st Century:
Sybylle
Perretti
Judith
Schaechter
Also,
Embracing
Glass and New Media:
Tony
Oursler
Clark
DeCapite Jr.
Gabe
Barcia-Colombo
Wayne
Garrett
In the next
few years, a Secessionist gallery will emerge. Who will they carry? I am
suggesting this stable of artists:
Mark Zirpel
Christina
Bothwell
Michael
Rogers
Rik Allen
Susan
Taylor Glasgow
Michael
Janis
Oben
Albright
Carmen
Lozar
Jeremy
Lepisto
Charlotte
Potter
Andy Paiko
Micah Evans
Right now
secessionist sculptors are spread over many venues, galleries and fairs. So
collectors seeking this type of work are just as scattered. When a gallery of
this type opens, it will crystallize this collector base as well. The gallery will become known for secessionist
work and will be ground zero for collectors to check first. Museums will begin having secession shows.
Glass will also slowly be absorbed into the fine art fairs such as the Art
Basel Miami sub fairs such as Art Miami and Miami Projects. The names above
will be the stars of such a movement. There are so many others ….please forgive
me if I had not gotten to you. I would love to hear of other examples of
Secessionist shows.
4 comments:
So glad to have read this article. I hadn't really thought about it before, but I think glass secessionism is where my heart truly lies!
as a new and eager glass artist im a bit distressed at this artical, i once told Tim Tate that i wanted to play around with glass and ceramics and he said go for it! after mentioning a few names that have also done this(succesfully i may add) it warmed my heart, and gave me the confidance to go for it. BUT here in england i felt it nessesary to get a good foundation in both element BA(hons) which to me is to truly know every aspect of glass and how to work in a hotshop/glassblow/kiln-glass/architectural glass. which is going to cost me best part of £25000 including the ceramics i must add. if i did not choose this path which other path could i have chosen? NONE. to gain credibility in this chosen profession it is essential in my eyes to have this foundation to start from and then decide if i want to make AWESOME OUT THERE 21ST CENTURY GLASS ART. is this not so?
"It's really about Fine Art, vs, Craft. Not Glass Secessionism.. Just declaring a movement, does not equate to a movement. I would argue that Sir Issac Newton was the first to leave the glass Craft arena, when he used glass scientifically to break sunlight. Benjamin Franklin also worked with Scientific glass and electricity. This is not new. Things will radically change as Corning's Gorrilla glass ubiquitously replaces surfaces and cell phones dissappear.. giving ALL transparent glass surfaces the potential for interaction like you have never seen before. Then, everyone will be a "Glass artist" as now everyone is a " photographer". What will the "art" be then? who knows, although you can have fine art without good craftsmanship.. but rarely.. but you can have good craftsmanship, without fine art. The best and most lasting.. are often a mix of both.. as is good theatre.. a surprise.. something new.. and yes. it just might be a new vessel.. you never know... Put the energy into making new work.. Make the glass itself say something different... the rest will evolve on its own.. "- Vog
I have a hard time looking at my James Wayne, Robert Fritz and William Warehall pieces and believing they were not early secessionists....in spite of their somewhat obvious vessel-vascular form. I beg you to look at these late 60's- early 70's works and find vital resistance to ancient-if not then current-murano traditions..... Its not because it's a vessel form that it doesn't transcend a past, rather a new intent-then (now) individual-borne execution- towards a new, perhaps unseen idiom. I have an early graal piece by Brent Kee Young ( one of about 10 pieces, he says...that were his truthful desire to explore all glass method/technique...) that defies the convention of the era....and exudes that philosophical bent of his words..." what is is important is what is not there...".
The Young piece is indeed a vessel form....but how else to end up with any bounded control of a hot, viscous liquid that can be plastically expanded in volume and resultant meaning if not contained by rotational handling of the ever-perilous effect of unescapable gravity?
I will concurrently agree that many glassists did indeed find a newish vessel form that was widely appreciated/resonated/sold to the public....and started long term commercial viability for those folks. I look at mid 80's Nicholson and Laurie Thal works.......early works strongest and contributory to the field. But they never moved off that success to any degree, thus repeating the retail cash-flow. Perhaps an undeniable fiscal reality. But i think also of the nearly 50 year efforts of Jim and Connie Grant....whose widely ranging work-albeit mostly vessels- showed huge exploration of technique/discoveery/curiosity out of desire.....
One of the unanswered, timeless quandary of moving into the "new" and/or leaving the conventions or prior "isms".....is the unfortunate capital costs of production facility.... and commercial politics of galleries. I have a whole treatise-pro and con-re: gallery systemics, but another day for that......
ralph johnson jr
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