Washington Glass School artists Michael Janis and Tim Tate featured in Rip! Tear! Collage as Critique at the Eye Street Gallery, opening June 11.

There is a particular kind of honesty in the torn edge. Unlike the clean cut, which implies control, intention, the world of the maker, a torn surface tells the truth about force. Something resisted; something gave way. The fragment that remains carries the memory of what it once belonged to, and the wound where it parted is part of the meaning.
When the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities invited 23 District artists to explore collage and assemblage as forms of disruption, critique, and reconstruction, the exhibition they assembled — Rip! Tear! Collage as Critique, opening June 11 at the Eye Street Gallery — landed on something that feels genuinely urgent. This exhibition deliberately expands collage beyond paper: it includes quilting, video, sculpture, ceramics, and, importantly, glass – all aimed at mirroring the “fractured pace and layered realities of contemporary life.” It’s an exhibition grounded in disruption and reassembly.
For Michael Janis – Co-Director of the Washington Glass School and one of DC’s most rigorously conceptual glass artists – this isn’t metaphor, it’s method. His glass practice already is collage-like: each kiln-formed panel accumulates imagery and material in layers. Collage for Janis is not a style but a condition: as he has said, his work “explore[s] raw emotions and the fragility of the soul” by showing how one might present a calm facade while “distracted by inconsistent thoughts, beliefs, or attitudes”. In this way, Janis’s work embodies the exhibition’s premise that the self itself is a collage – held together by nothing more than the frame we choose to stand inside.

For Rip! Tear!, Janis contributes a glass-and-video work titled “Within”. The piece centers on an unidealized human face – textured beard, a weary expression – looking out at the viewer. It is literally a portrait in kiln-formed glass powder, where each subtle shift of translucency was carefully applied. Behind and within that glass portrait, however, plays a flickering video loop of abstract light and color patterns. The digital animations pulse and flow behind the face, as if emerging from beneath the skin. In practical terms, this is collage: video and glass combined, layered to form a single image. In conceptual terms, it’s even richer. The face meets the viewer directly, “not performing” for the camera, while the embedded video suggests the private stream of digital noise we all carry in our heads – “the endless scroll” of images and information we can never turn off.
Janis describes Within as capturing “the unbearable contemporary condition of being a person with a screen in your brain.” We present ourselves – our faces – to the world, but behind that public image the “digital hurricane” swirls unseen. The effect is that Within is collage as philosophy: it asserts that identity is inherently fragmented. One reads a visage in the foreground, but the subject is held together by overlapping layers of memory, media, and meaning. This fusion of portraiture and video under glass deepens the show’s theme: collage here isn’t just about cutting and pasting materials, but about revealing how modern life is already a patchwork of contexts. Within fits naturally in an exhibition about reassembly, because it literally reassembles reality – a physical face and a moving digital backdrop – into a new image.

Tim Tate: Preservation as Resurrection
Washington Glass School founder Tim Tate is also featured in Rip! Tear!, with a new sculpture work. Tate’s approach resonates with collage’s spirit of salvage, though he comes at it from a different angle than Janis. As one critic noted, “Tim Tate could truly be described as a mixed-media artist” – his signature reliquaries combine hand-blown glass cases, found objects, electronic circuitry and small video screens. In his work in Rip! Tear!, Tate takes archival photographs – often of queer couples and individuals erased from mainstream histories – and “resurrects” them with an inventive re-creation as a looping video that brings a semblance of life or motion back to the images. A static portrait becomes something like a flickering memory, protected yet animate.
In Rip! Tear!, Tate’s inclusion signals how collage can be temporal as well as material. His work literally preserves and animates the fragments of history. He creates an intimate shrine to personal identity: the glass reliquary is both fragile and enduring, “it might have been found in an old church somewhere, flickering away in the darkness for centuries,” preserving something precious. By doing so, Tate reminds us that collage has always been about putting the forgotten or discarded back into the frame. Where Janis looks inward at our digital selves, Tate looks backward at the analog past. Together they show two sides of the same coin: that both individual identity and collective memory are made of pieces we must hold together.
Washington Glass School in the Exhibition
What Rip! Tear! makes visible – and what the presence of Janis and Tate confirms – is that glass has urgent relevance in a collage context. Glass is a medium of paradox: it’s transparent yet opaque, fragile yet millennia-old, immediate yet containing ages. As a material practice, glass itself collages light and shadow. Janis and Tate have spent decades treating glass as a conceptual tool, not just a craft. This exhibition places their work alongside 21 other artists (painters, sculptors, video artists, quilters, etc.) using collage tactics. It opens a conversation about DC’s creative community: about how art can reconstruct meaning from rupture, whether social, personal or historical.
Together, Janis and Tate embody Washington Glass School’s broader mission. Their work pushes glass beyond studio technique into contemporary discourse – into public art, memorial, media theory, and social justice. Seeing Within next to fabric quilts or a sound collage underscores that a glass panel can carry the same weight as any painting or sculpture in discussing today’s fractured world. For WGS, Rip! Tear! is a chance to champion glass as a cutting-edge medium for critique and change.
Opening Reception: Wednesday, June 11, 2026, 6–8 PM at the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities (Eye Street Gallery)
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Exhibition Dates: June 11 – August 7, 2026 (Eye Street Gallery, 200 I St. SE, Washington, DC 20003)
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Hours: Free and open to the public Monday–Friday, 9 AM–5:30 PM
RSVP: Eventbrite link HERE
“Rip! Tear! Collage as Critique” Jurors:
Helina Metaferia, Zoe Charlton, Teri Henderson
Curated by Michelle May-Curry, Ph.D., Curator, DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities.
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