Roll-up your glass! How warm and hot glass can live in harmony.

Some pix of the great work made by the roll-up class – where the students made a fused glass panel here at the Washington Glass School, and the following week, the class was held at DC Glass Works, where the fused panel gets…. well… rolled-up and blown into vessel shapes.

The rollup class gets a history of the process from Audrey Wilson

This process gets all the benefits of fused glass— creating differing inside and outside imagery, precise color placement, and full cross-sections of color. 

The flat fused panels get rolled up and blown.
Audrey and Dave working in the DC Glassworks hotshop.
This fused panel…
…became this sweet vessel.
Betsy Mead’s fused glass artwork transformed…
…into 3-D sculpture.
Tracy Benson’s fish panel flat…
…now ready to hold sharks and mermaids!
The blown work getting ready for the anneal cycle at the hot shop.

 A great class and a great time!

Newly Found Blue Planet Where It’s Raining Glass! Hallelujah!

Interstellar Glass Fun Facts 
Astronomers said they had found another blue planet a long, long way from Earth — no water world, but a scorching, hostile place where it rains glass, sideways.

Blue planet HD 189733b around its host star (artist’s impression)

Using the Hubble Space Telescope, scientists from NASA and its European counterpart, ESA, have for the first time determined the true color of an exoplanet, celestial bodies which orbit stars other than our own Sun. 
They concluded that HD 189733b, a gas giant 63 light-years from Earth in the constellation Vulpecula (the Fox), was a deep cobalt blue, “reminiscent of Earth’s color as seen from space.”
“But that’s where the similarities end,” said a statement. This planet orbits very close to its host star and its atmosphere is heated to over 1,800 degrees Fahrenheit.It rains glass, sideways, in howling 4,350 miles-per-hour winds,” said the statement. The planet is one of the nearest exoplanets to Earth that can be seen crossing the face of its star, and has been intensively studied by Hubble and other telescopes.

“Measuring its color is a real first — we can actually imagine what this planet would look like if we were able to look at it directly,” said Frederic Pont of the University of Exeter, who co-wrote the paper in Astrophysical Journal Letters. Pont and a team measured how much light was reflected off the planet’s surface, a property known as albedo, in order to calculate its color. 

HD 189733b was discovered in 2005. It is only 2.9 million miles from its parent star, so close that it is gravitationally locked. One side always faces the star and the other side is always dark.In 2007, NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope measured the infrared light, or heat, from the planet, leading to one of the first temperature maps for an exoplanet. The map shows day side and night side temperatures on HD 189733b differ by about 500 degrees Fahrenheit. This should cause fierce winds to roar from the day side to the night side.

With apologies to the Weathergirls & writers of Its Raining Men: 

Barometer’s getting low

According to all sources,the street’s the place to go

Cause tonight for the first time

Its gonna be badass 

For the first time in history

It’s gonna start raining glass.

Its Raining Glass! Hallelujah! 

Other WGS : Glass Fun Facts

Dr Claudia Rousseau reviews DC GlassWorks show

The Gazette Newspaper reviews DC GlassWorks show (now thru Aug 18) at the Montpelier Arts Center. 

Dave D’Orio and Henrik Sundqvist – “Spray”
engraved hand-blown glass, cast aluminum, paper; photo Pete Duvall

Lavishing praise on the glass artwork – Dr Rousseau writes about Dave D’Orio’s artwork:  At the entrance of the large and airy gallery space one finds his recent collaborative work called “Spray.” Made with the help of printmaker Henrik Sundqvist, the work is comprised of five hand-blown glass spray bottles with cast aluminum heads. Detailed glass engravings of insects grace the exteriors, and there are tags made of folded paper on which are etched the name of some kind of insect spray, images of insects and baroque crosses. The elegance of this work, each spray bottle set on its own little shelf against a gray wall, cannot be overstated. The critical narrative is clear here: these same vessels that look so beautiful to us are death to the creatures that are depicted on them. For D’Orio it’s more the facts of the situation that appeal to him. Spray bottles are a common object, found everywhere. Yet not like these. Confronting the conundrum of “ours against theirs” in this way brings many issues to mind, and forces the viewer to think about his/her own relation to the environment and our actions in relation to it. Yet, the remarkable effect of the work remains largely aesthetic….”
Click HERE to read the full article online. (Scroll down to “DC Glassworks”).
DC Glassworks
Montpelier Arts Center, 9652 Muirkirk Road, Laurel. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily. For information call 301-377-7900. 

Maverick Mike Returns From Texas

The students in Michael Janis’ “Visualizations in Glass” circle around the instructor.

Our urban cowboy, Professor Janis, returns to Washington, DC after a teaching stint on the wide open ranges of Hot Glass Houston – looking a bit like he was rode hard and put away wet. (Like he normally does, without benefit of photoshop services.) He had a great time, and sent some photos of his frit powder imagery class, and tales of sitting by the campfire with the class. 

The students learned how to create imagery from frit powder.
The students dove right in, creating a series of samples of different techniques.
The class was very focused.
The students each created great images

A light touch…Michael divulged all his secrets of how to create fused layered images from frit powers and other media.
Besides the sgraffito technique, the students learned how to deconstruct an image into separate layers.
The images were assembled and fused into narrative studies – getting the 3 day class ready for larger works that pulled all the techniques together.
Cynthia Gilkey works on a piece that incorporates a tribute to her mother, Rieko.

  

Cynthia’s artwork as she worked.
The finished work.
Glass artist Kathy Jordan Walsh shows off her imagery skills.
A dam built around the glass stack keeps the glass from flowing out during the firing process.
After firing, the colors mature – what a great piece!
The glass sets up their works inside the kiln – listening intently to Cynthia as she outlines how to minimize air bubbles and “edge needles”.
The finished works as they are removed from the kiln.

Was there cattle rustling? Certainly. 

Houston has no zoning – the view from Michael’s hotel. Cow tipping allowed.

Bowling with armadillos…in the glass studio? Natch.

Honkey-Tonks and wet t-shirt contests? Hell yeah – This is Texas, after all!

Opposite from Hot Glass Houston studio is the Red River Dance Hall & Saloon.

A great time was had at a great place!

Afterwards, the class celebrates a fun session.

Intowner Reviews Tate’s Sleepwalker @ American University Museum

The July issue of The InTowner features review by Tony Harvey

The InTowner 

Review of Tim Tate / Pete Duvall / Richard Schellenberg collaborative exhibition at American University Museum Pg 8, July, 2013

by Anthony Harvey

Washington’s studio glass art star Tim Tate continues to astonish museum goers with the quality and beauty of his innovative and increasingly complex glass art. Tate is now adding another level of challenge to his work through his recent collaborations with video and conceptual artists and photographers Pete Duvall and Richard Schellenberg. The rich results of this collaboration are on display in a current exhibition at the Katzen Arts Center.

Entitled “TimTate: Sleepwalker,” the show opens with Tate’s knockout 2012 Dada’s (or the Astronaut’s) Dream , a bouquet of electronic, video facial body-part flowers — primarily two inquiring eyes — irregularly arranged on a small steel post. He then moves immediately into his collaborative works with Duval and Schellenberg.

First up is a triptych of images titled: “I Was Not In My Right Mind”, which presents three characters performing hypothetical pieces that reconstruct scenes from Carol Reed’s famous film noir melodrama, The Third Man. Set in allied occupied Vienna at the end of World War II, Tate and a second actor play the parts of Harry Lime (Orson Wells in the film) and Holly Martins (originally Joseph Cotton). The film’s romantic interest, Anna Schmidt, played by Alida Valli, is the mystery presence. Wells and Cotton as marionettes are cleverly portrayed in Tate’s triptych as a pair of song and dance men, both  performing with canes — a riff no doubt on the running through dark streets and underground sewers that both do in the original film — with Schmidt, who has lost her lover Lime through the action of Martins, serving as the character in the triptych who plays the role of silence.

Tate’s “rosebud” is a thrown white ball first bouncing from right to left in the third panel, which uses the iconic Ferris wheel image of the film’s Viennese amusement park for its background, then through the second panel with its concluding film sequence of Schmidt walking down a tree-lined alleé, and finally to the first of the three triptych panels with our song and dance pair of Martins and Lime, whose jerky, puppets-on-a-string body movements are hilarious. The second panel also operates independently of the first and third, with Tate (as Lime) holding and intently viewing a pocket watch, seeming to time Schmidt’s long walk — or perhaps concerned about the timing of their respective flights from war-torn Vienna. As puzzling as it is engaging!

Black and white stills of objects in the triptych (and there must be a black rotary dial telephone somewhere in the triptych background’s flowing narrative) together with a pair of video boxes containing works called Portal of Light and Portal of Darkness provide further supporting context to the marvelous title work of the show —Sleepwalker. 

Joseph Cornell immediately came to mind as I began absorbing the lush visuals of this work. Cornell, an influential early filmmaker as well as the creator of extraordinary aesthetically infused art boxes, once asserted that until we are able to record our dreams, motion picture film will have to suffice. Tate would add video and electronic to Cornell’s medium, and Sleepwalker is a mesmerizing example of what can be artistically accomplished with existing media. Comprising a large rectangular screen on which a video of an attractive young woman with a glorious head of flowing hair is shown shifting her head from side to side as she sleeps and no doubt dreams with the physicality of a sleepwalker. Flanking her video are six smaller, oval screens, three hanging on either of the two side walls, each of which seems to play across the room against its opposite number. The farthest two appear to deal with gender — a somewhat abstract frontal view of a female form; across the way is a rear view of a more realistically depicted male nude. The middle two posit an amusement park’s Ferris wheel — urban pleasure — against the innocence of a foliage covered suburban house while the closest pair juxtapose a hand that is writing and then erasing on a blackboard the words, “I see how far I’ve wandered” with a mouth that is softly speaking into a rotary dial telephone receiver. Equally soft orchestral music lulls one into a relaxed state, music with which to fall asleep and yet to dream!

Two other videos complete the collaborative portion of Tate’s photographic/performance/electronic show. The first is of a boy’s dream of flying on Superman’s shoulders until the boy falls dead on the floor and Superman discovers that it is the boy’s energy and drive that allows him to fly — and the subsequent consequences of the boy describing his dream to his mother. The second involves a young woman throwing dice — perhaps a play on Mallarme’s famous 19th century poem “A Throw of the Dice Never Will Abolish Chance”. In this video, the number of dice is eventually increased to that of a Niagara of falling dice — to apparently no avail.My last encounter in the show took me to Tate’s glass and mixed-media work, specifically to a viewing of two of his terrific glass reliquaries. Both dramatically advance Tate’s multi-media creativity by incorporating miniature TV monitors playing poignant video narratives as the centerpieces of each of the reliquaries’ glass enclosed found, cast, and sculpted objects. The first of these, Dreams of a Lost Love Found, is especially engaging, with its character of a nude, sleeping boy depicted with a second figure — an apparition — rising from his bed and walking into the background only to return to the boy in the bed as a nude woman.

For the full newspaper pdf article – click HERE starting Pg 8.

photo by Pete Duvall

Tim Tate: Sleepwalkercontinues through August 11th.

American University Museum/Katzen Center

4400 Mass. Ave.

Tue.-Sun., 11am-4pm; Mon., closed

202-885-1300 • www.american.edu/museum

Art Enables – Outsider Art Inside the Beltway

Ward 5 Panel Artist Talk

Wednesday, July 17, 6-8pm 

Join Lavinia Wohlfarth (DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities Commissioner for Ward 5 and gallerist behind Wohlfarth Galleries in Brookland) as she discusses the history of art in the Brookland section of Washington, DC,  as well as a variety of grant opportunities available for artists across the city.

Lavinia will answer your questions regarding the city’s grant application process for artists as well as the showing, selling, and promoting of your artwork.

Free and open to the public – RSVP to bbaldwin@art-enables.org

LOCATION 

Off-Rhode Studio at Art Enables Gallery

2204 Rhode Island Avenue, NE

Washington, DC 20018

Git Along Lil Doggies – Professor Janis Heads to Houston

Yee-haw! Hot Glass Houston is fixin’ to round up our Professor Janis and abscond him from Yankee territory for another class in sunny Houston. Last year‘s class was such a rip-roaring, rootin’, tootin’ success, that they wanted an encore performance.
This time, we understand, Professor Janis is ready to Mess with Texas.

Michael is ready for Texas – he’s a bronco-bustin’ cowboy.

He’s a straight shooting son-of-a-gun.
He has hat-head.
But can he take the heat?

Check out what happened last year when Michael went all Chuck Norris at Hot Glass Houston – click HERE to jump to that post.

New Class – Just Added! Mirroring on Glass

Through The Looking Glass

If you have ever gazed into a mirror and wondered how exactly does a sheet of glass become such a stunning reflective surface, then I invite you to journey down the rabbit hole into the seductive world of mirrored glass. This class will demystify the mirroring process without losing any of the magic, allowing each student the opportunity to create their own mirrored object.  This two-day workshop will cover some simple chemistry, glass preparation and handling, chemical application and teamwork.

Flat glass will be available, however feel free to bring a small clear or transparent colored glass vessel such as a bottle, vase or dish, the cleaner the better. On the other hand – please bring clothes to get dirty in because the chemicals can be quite messy!  See you on the other side of the looking glass! 
Our instructor is supastar Evan Morgan – he’s come back to DC teach this special class. Evan was born and raised in Hawaii but is now living outside of Athens, GA. Evan graduated from the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) with a BFA in sculpture. He was raised around the arts and by sixteen he was helping build glass shops on the outer islands with his stepfather Hugh Jenkins. Glass became not only a passion but a challenge, Evan continued to blow glass through out high school, exhibiting in Hawaii Craftsmen by 1999.

Instructor      Evan Morgan

Dates:          Sat/Sun July 20 & 21

Times:          1 pm to 6pm  on the Saturday; 1pm to 4pm on Sunday

Tuition :        $300 per student (all materials included) 
Limit 12 students 

Interested? Send an email about the mirroring class to the school: washglassschool@aol.com

Call For Entries: New Glass Review 35

Each year, the Corning Museum of Glass conducts a worldwide competition to select 100 images of new works in glass. Objects considered excellent from any of several viewpoints- such as function, subject matter, aesthetics, and technique – will be chosen. The works are chosen by a changing jury of curators, artists, designers, art dealers, and critics.

The deadline for submissions is October 1, 2013. In late November or early December, a jury selects 100 images from the submissions. New Glass Review is published every spring by The Corning Museum of Glass in conjunction with Neues Glas (New Glass), published by Ritterbach Verlag, Frechen, Germany, and GLASS: The UrbanGlass Art Quarterly, published by UrbanGlass, Brooklyn, New York. 

You can apply online – (2013 is the last year for paper applications).   Click HERE to jump to Corning’s online application. Entry deadline – Oct 1, 2013.

American Craft Magazine Features Washington Glass School

American Craft magazine June/July 2013

The American Craft Council(ACC) is a national, nonprofit educational organization founded with a mission to promote understanding and appreciation of contemporary American craft. Their programs include the bimonthly magazine, American Craft, annual juried shows, various workshops, seminars and conferences, and more.

The June/July 2013 issue of American Craft Magazine showcases the cast glass work being made for the U.S. Library of Congress Adams Building. Julie K. Hanus – American Craft’s senior editor and Perry A. Price    the ACC’s director of education had come to the school in April and made a report on the process and the artists involved. 

From the magazine: The original doors were designed in 1939 by Lee Lawrie, the sculptor whose Atlas graces Rockefeller Center. They’re massive bronze works, depicting 13 mythological and historical figures of language and learning. Over time, they had begun to fail, straining at the hinges, and didn’t meet modern building codes. Rather than altering the historic doors to address these issues, the Architect of the Capitol made a bold decision; in addition to conserving the Lawrie doors, they would reinterpret these unique Adams Building features in glass.

Jeff Wallin and Ray Ahlgren of Fireart Glass in Portland, OR casting the glass panels. Photo by Charlie Lieberman

Review of each of the LOC cast glass panels with the Architect of the Capitol. L-R Paul Zimmerman/HITT Contracting, William Warmus/Art critic, Tim Tate, Michael Janis, Kevin Hildebrand/AOC, Erwin Timmers.

The doors began installation in the spring of 2013 and the entry areas began to transform.

From the interior of East facing building lobby.
The exterior of the first set of six pairs of doors.

The magazine will be on the stands soon – and is online right now! – Click HERE to jump to the American Craft Council website.

Washington Glass Studio team L-R Tim Tate, Sean Hennessey, Michael Janis, Audrey Wilson, Erwin Timmers