Mitch LaPlante

Started working in glass in 1998 at Public Glass in San Francisco.
www.mitchlaplante.com

I have been creating large scale natural fruit and vegetable forms in glass for more than a decade. I choose to make naturally inspired forms that I think are visually interesting and that I enjoy making in the glass studio. My works include Rainier and Bing cherries; chile, jalapeño and bell peppers; pear and round tomatoes; Gravenstein, Gala, and Delicious apples; pluots and plums; Forelle and Bosc pears; and Black Mission figs. Cherries—the Rainier Cherry and Bing Cherry pieces—have been my most popular works. Most of my objects involve stems and bodies. My process involves making blown stems separately that are joined hot to a bubble after it is inflated. I sometimes employ several steps of color application to achieve more painterly effects, such as the D’Anjou Pear. I have also made some larger installations, the largest of which is the Harvest Grape Cluster at Copia in Napa—a hanging cluster of more than 300 blown grapes measuring about 6 feet tall and almost equally wide. In an ongoing collaboration with Ed Kirshner, we have made illuminated pieces using electrified gas plasma, including, thus far, the Plasma Cherry and the Fiery Jalapeño Pepper.

“Red D’Anjou Pear”
Mitch LaPlante
2008
Hand blown glass with hot assemblage
16 x 16 x 28″

Liz Strickland Artist Bio

https://plus.google.com/114971091710842874915/about

At age two Liz Strickland created her first piece of artwork, multicolored dots on a piece of paper.  When her mother asked her about her creations she titled it “Rainbow Snowy Day”.  With a life long passions for the arts it was no surprise that Liz chose to pursue a BFA in Glass at California College of the Arts.  In 2009 she graduated with distinction.

Since the completion of her under graduated degree Liz has continued to make art and show throughout the bay area. To continue her practice as a glass artist Liz interns and teaches at The Crucible.  She is responsible for the maintenance of the Crucible’s Fusing and Slumping Department in exchange or kiln use.  She has created graphics for the 2012 Glass symposium.  She also spent time volunteering with the summer youth glass blowing classes, helping to shape the next generations of glass artist.

Because the elements of detail, size and material spark an initial interest, the work draws the viewer in with its stunning presence. The content displayed in its intricacy holds one’s attention, constructing a space to explore the many levels of history, beauty and personal connection to place. The cinematic co-mingling of concept and content nurture an environment of discovery allowing the viewer to assemble a personal reading of the story, imagery and emotion found within each piece. Liz’s work investigates the overlap of perception, past and present, using materials, images and scale to manifest an emotional landscape that allows for total immersion in the work.

Jerry Lin-Hsien Kung

“I was made in Hong Kong, born in Taiwan, and my parents are from China. I received my BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1999 for Glass Sculpture after a short stint at Hampshire College studying Latin American Literature and the behavior patterns between wolves and sheep dogs. I left the East Coast heading west after college, in part to heal from an accident that left a few titanium pins and stainless steel plates in my head. I couldn’t smell or taste for three years. I moved from New Mexico to Southern California, then finally Oakland. Glass making has been my passport to seeing the world. I’ve traveled through Japan, China, Taiwan, and most recently Scandinavia. I’ve worked on various projects including custom lighting.”

Jerry Kung and Alexander Abajian are the founders of FirePrint Studio in Oakland, CA, where they collaborate to create glass sculpture utilizing age-old techniques while integrating a contemporary aesthetic. They were awarded People’s Choice honors at the 2011 Museum of Glass Red Hot Party & Auction.

For the past four or so years, Alex Abajian and Jerry Lin-Hsien Kung have been making “creatures” — tripodal formations of bended glass, typically coated in a mirror finish. In isolation, one of these creatures might appear a merely decorative object — a chic, sensuous addition to a posh lobby or some such space. However, Abajian and Kung have no interest in delivering their creations to such a fate.

To thwart such a banal reading, the duo crowds the creatures in a runway installation, wherein they become a reflective, mercurial melee of limbs and curves, capturing viewers’ reflections and enlivening one another. “They naturally want to go together in certain ways,” said Abajian. “Like one will be pushing and the other will be pulling. They nestle into these groups and you see it looks like a group of people, how people actually congregate.”

With a $40,000 grant from the Tacoma Museum of Glass, Abajian and Kung were able to create quite a sizable congregation. This also makes the exhibition, Creatures, now at Vessel Gallery, one of the most expensive in the history of Oakland’s gallery scene.

But it’s not exactly clear how someone seeking art should approach these objects. One thing is sure: They are not like conventional sculptures, where the art is in some sense encapsulated in the finished form. Rather, Abajian and Kung’s art is in the process.

The artists have been collaborating since they were students at the Rhode Island School of Design. They have a seemingly inexhaustible supply of shared stories, and even possess matching cranial scars (each the result of a serious injury; neither glass blowing-related). Together, they pursued the craft end of glass-making for a while, but soon started drifting toward something else — a more playful, organic process free of rigid expectations.

 

Alex Abijaian

Alexander Sarkis Abajian graduated from the Rhode Island School of Design in 2000 with a Bachelors Degree in Glass Sculpture. Since then he has exhibited nationwide, Colorado Springs Museum, Colorado Springs, CO; Adam Whitney Gallery, Omaha, NE; Pismo Gallery, Denver, CO; San Francisco Design Center at the A. Rudin Showroom. He has also been a recipient of many awards and scholarships: The General Pilchuck Scholarship, The Martin Foundation Young Craftsmen Award, The Taos Open- Best of Craft Award, to name a few. He was recently a visiting artist at the California College of the Arts. Alexander Abajian is a prolific young artist untethered by convention. He integrates a variety of different elements to his own sculptures. Whether electroplating metal to glass, combining kiln castings with hand blown accents, manipulating solid pieces of color to forge vessels impregnated with intricate designs, or translating his own figurative paintings into three-dimensional sculptures, Alexander manifests an interminable drive to create. He is on the forefront of glass art, truly utilizing the material as a means of expression, free from the constraints of craft.  Alex now lives and works in San Francisco California.

Collaborations: Alex Abajian and Jerry Lin-Hsien Kung
For the past four or so years, Alex Abajian and Jerry Lin-Hsien Kung have been making “creatures” — tripodal formations of bended glass, typically coated in a mirror finish. In isolation, one of these creatures might appear a merely decorative object — a chic, sensuous addition to a posh lobby or some such space. However, Abajian and Kung have no interest in delivering their creations to such a fate.

To thwart such a banal reading, the duo crowds the creatures in a runway installation, wherein they become a reflective, mercurial melee of limbs and curves, capturing viewers’ reflections and enlivening one another. “They naturally want to go together in certain ways,” said Abajian. “Like one will be pushing and the other will be pulling. They nestle into these groups and you see it looks like a group of people, how people actually congregate.”

With a $40,000 grant from the Tacoma Museum of Glass, Abajian and Kung were able to create quite a sizable congregation. This also makes the exhibition, Creatures, now at Vessel Gallery, one of the most expensive in the history of Oakland’s gallery scene.

But it’s not exactly clear how someone seeking art should approach these objects. One thing is sure: They are not like conventional sculptures, where the art is in some sense encapsulated in the finished form. Rather, Abajian and Kung’s art is in the process.

The artists have been collaborating since they were students at the Rhode Island School of Design. They have a seemingly inexhaustible supply of shared stories, and even possess matching cranial scars (each the result of a serious injury; neither glass blowing-related). Together, they pursued the craft end of glass-making for a while, but soon started drifting toward something else — a more playful, organic process free of rigid expectations.

 by Alex Abajian and Jerry Lin-Hsien Kung
by  Alex Abajian

Marty Meade

Has been working glass since 1973.
www.martymeade.com 

Marty Mead has been a glass artist since 1973, studying traditional stained glass with Judy Raffael, (now know as Judy North).  In 1981, she traveled to Chartres France to study with Roger Darricarrere.Her recent passion to the torch resulted from a workshop given by her early student, Leah Fairbanks.  The many years of working with glass and her painting experience, made it an easy transition for this new love affair.In 2008, she attended an advanced bead making seminar in Murano, Italy with Leah Fairbanks and Andrea Guarino-Slemmons.Marty has been teaching glass art at the College of Marin since 1978 and won the College of Marin’s Academic Senate Award for Community Education Teacher of the Year in 2006.  Her teaching has taken her to the Banff Center for the Arts in Alberta, Canada, where she introduced stained glass as a fine art.  In 1982, she testified before the California Assembly as the expert in the field on changing AB3299 to include stained glass as a fine art.  She has specialized in commissioned stained glass for private homes and autonomous panels for galleries.  She is also a painter, teaching watercolor at the College of Marin since 1995.Marty has been inspired by her Pima Indian and Mexican heritage.  The Corn Necklace came from a dream image, and was created as a tribute to this sacred food source.Her art was featured in a Japanese magazine. Art Pictorial, Vol9, “Spirit and Tradition in American Artists, Ms. Martha Ronay Meade, September 1996. A bead from the Salmon Series, was selected for the permanent collection in the Lampwork Museum in KOBE Japan.Presently, Marty shares her studio with other bead makers, and has hosted annual workshops with Leah Fairbanks. Other guest artists to her studio have included: John Winter of West Virginia, Katherine Wadsworth from Louisiana. Bead making on Monday and Thursday mornings continues to be a special gathering of friends. Because of this collaboration, the group became known as the Arroyo Road Bead Collective.

* She is the recipient of a California Arts Council Grant, Marin Arts Council Community Grant. A stained glass series depicting San Geronimo landscape, is now part of the permanent art collection at the San Geronimo Community Center. It was designed by Marty, and executed by Valley students under her direction.

Barbara Barnett Artist Bio

Has been working in glass in California since 2007. 

I have been an artist most of my life but only recently began working in glass. In 2007, I started working with stained glass and moved through kiln formed glass to cast glass after taking a class at The Crucible.  My work reflects the natural world I see around me, combining my love of nature and a passion for art.

Creating a glass sculpture out of a clay or wax model is always a journey of discovery.  My geeky side loves the physics of glass, the problem solving, and the complexity of the process.  My emotional side loves the observation and discovery of the form, the surprise at the outcome, and discovering new aspects of myself through the process.

During the 1970’s through mid 1990’s, I worked with a group of activist artists called Fireworks Graphics to produce silkscreen and offset posters addressing the social justice issues of the day. The Fireworks poster collective produced over 150 posters (mainly silkscreen).  Fireworks Posters are part of the Oakland Museum of California poster collection and can be seen with other social justice posters of the period at: OMCA Social Justice Poster Collection.

I attended San Jose State University and majored in Biology.  I worked at the University of California, Berkeley in many capacities and retired from the Central Budget Office in 2009 ready to devote my time to glass.

I share a studio at The Crucible in Oakland, California with two other glass artists.  We invite people to stop by “Go Go Glass” in Studio’s 1 & 2 at the Crucible.  The music is always on and the conversation is always interesting.

Raven Series: “Raven Ceremonial Rattle”
Barbara Barnett
2011
Lead glass, feathers, beads, and steel
9x10x5″

Raven Series: “Raven Sanctuary”
Barbara Barnett
2012
Cast glass, deer antlers, ceramic egg
18x10x12″

 

Daniel Erwin

“A glassblower and philosopher from a young age, I could make a fluted
bowl before I could make a decent sandwich and lecture on the
hermeneutics of uncertainty before I knew what to say to a woman at a
bar. In an attempt to stay grounded, I’ve started spending weekdays in
an office and reading fiction – but I’m still easily distracted by
ladies with esoteric diction who can cook.”

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Without Daniel, there would not be a Symposium website or printed program.  In addition to his incredible technical expertise, Daniel is patient and always keeps a positive attitude.  It is a joy to work with him.  And, he can blow glass!  The perfect combination to be on the Symposium organizing team.

Dale Beevers

Dale is a jack of all trades, having completed advanced studies in archaeology at UC Berkeley, and over 12 years working in finance, media and publishing, marketing and communications, product design and project management.  She is currently working to combine this entrepreneurial spirit with her passion for creating art, studying sculpture at the Academy of Art in San Francisco and working as a volunteer and intern at The Crucible in her spare time.  She is also a mother and active volunteer in her community.  Dale’s work is evolving, using ceramic, metal, glass and found objects to explore issues of identity, mythology and historical narrative in her sculpture.  Symposium

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Dale is an inspiration to the organizing team, giving the Symposium many hours of her time while attending school and being a mom.  She has been dubbed the “goddess” of the team for her hard work, efficiency, and unflappable calm, while juggling forms and feedback from 140 symposium presenters.

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Janet and Rick Nicholson

Started working in glass in Los Angeles in 1979.
www.nicholsonblownglass.com

Rick and Janet Nickolson have worked together as a successful team since 1979.  Rick first studied glass with Don Hartman and the University of Southern California and was a TA at Pilchuck Glass School for Dale Chihuly and Fritz Dreisbach in 1981.  He has continued to study with such notables as Therman Statom, Richard Marquis, Dino Rosin, Lucartha Kohler, Karen Willenbrink-Johnsen and Jasen Johnsen.

Following his university education, Rick operated a pottery studio full time in southern California from 1974-1981.  Janet left her photography position at the University of Southern California in 1979 to freelance and create designs on Rick’s clay forms.  They were married the same year, and their artistic collaboration began.  By 1982, they were called to concentrate on glass alone and settled on nine acres in Auburn, California where they built a hot shop and raised two daughters.  Their work has expanded to include metal fabrication, hot sculpting, fusing, and casting.They create figurative sculptural lighting, multiple piece wall and ceiling installations.  Select projects include two wall installations for the Ritz Carlton Hotel in Shenzhen, China; a 21-piece wall installation for the lobby of Weil, Gotschal & Manges International Law Firm in Dallas, Texas; a 17-piece wall installation for Kaiser Permanente Medical Building in Roseville, California; a pair of Torsos for the 4 Points Hotel spa in Guangzhou, China; multiple wall installations, oversize glass and metal sculptures for the M Resort in Las Vegas, and a wall series of 10 platters for BMI in New York City.  While Rick does the hand blown work, Janet assists and is the color and design part of their collaboration.

“Shorebird”
Janet and Jack Nickolson
2012
freehand blown and hot sculpted glass, hand forged steel
12″x5″x8″

“Red Rock Point”
Janet and Jack Nicholson
2012
freehand blown glass wall installation
61″x8″x48″

Other Bay Area Anniversary Events

The whole community is getting into the spirit of celebrating five decades of studio glass.  Start the symposium weekend early and take in the following exhibits and events!

Oakland Museum of California (OMCA)
Playing with Fire: Artists of the California Studio Glass Movement
October 27, 2012 – March 24, 2013
http://museumca.org/exhibit/playing-with-fire-artists-california-studio-glass-movement
See the art at the OMCA and then see the artists on Saturday and Sunday at the Symposium! The OMCA is open Wednesday through Sunday so come to Oakland before the symposium and see the OMCA exhibit on either Thursday Nov 8th or Friday November 9th 

California College of the Arts
Glass Program Alumni Exhibition
November 9, 2012 – November 16, 212
http://www.cca.edu/calendar/2012/glass-program-alumni-exhibition
Many of the CCA glass alumni will be giving demonstrations and lectures at the Crucible symposium. That makes the CCA Alumni Exhibition the perfect Friday (Nov 9) addition to the symposium on Saturday and Sunday (Nov 10-11).

DeYoung Museum
Reflections: Celebrating 50 Years of the Studio Glass Movement
October 13, 2012 – January 27, 2013
http://deyoung.famsf.org/deyoung/exhibitions/reflections-celebrating-50-years-studio-glass-movement