Artist Dale Chihuly Stretches Boundaries of Glass Blowing
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, December 28, 2024


Artist Dale Chihuly Stretches Boundaries of Glass Blowing
Dale Chihuly talks about his glass work. AP Photo/Stew Milne.

By: Verna Gates



ST. PETERSBURG, FL (REUTERS).- Artist Dale Chihuly has stretched the craft of glass blowing to breaking point and started an artistic revolution that has extended into sculpture and environmental art.

Instead of a small shop with a single artist creating private objects, Chihuly hired teams of craftsmen working together on complex, large-scale pieces made for public viewing. Tradition, symmetry and conformity also buckled in the heat of the ovens.

"I pushed the edge of thinness and collapsibility to make new forms," he explained in an interview.

Chihuly, whose work is exhibited in more than 200 museums around the globe, recently joined an elite group -- single artists with a permanent collection dedicated to their work.

The Morean Arts Center in St. Petersburg, Florida dedicated 7,600 square feet to display thousands of pieces of glass, many of them made especially for the collection. Architect Albert Alfonso designed the space, and is credited with keeping the project alive, despite the recession, thanks to his friendship with Chihuly.

"Albert transformed the space into a work of art. It complements my work," said Chihuly.

SPACE RESPONDS TO THE ART
The exhibition space includes natural materials such as wood, metal, stone and glass. Venetian plaster gives a nod to Chihuly's fondness of Italy and the Venetian glass blowers who inspired him as a student.

The chandelier room is shaped like a classic Art Deco vase, anchored with a blue and a ruby red chandelier designed for the collection.

"This is the first time that the architecture of a space responds to his work," Alfonso, of Alfonso Architects said. "Dale's never really had that."

Chihuly said all of it was a challenge.

"A lot of work went into aesthetics and materials," he said.

An entire wall of the exhibit is devoted to Chihuly's sketches etched into tiles.

Injured years ago in an auto accident, Chihuly only has vision in one eye. That, coupled with a shoulder injury, forced him to leave the physical work to others.

While they shape the hot glass, he sketches new designs and admits to a sense of relief trading his pipe for pen. The teamwork makes his seemingly endless flow of ideas emerge rapid fire from the ovens.

"I just like to work," he said.

The first table in the new gallery exhibits pieces from his basket series. Inspired by a collection of old Native American baskets in a history museum, the series was his first major innovation. The almost paper thin glass abandoned symmetry to allow gravity to take its course. The pieces incorporated fused drawings into the glass.

The artist's favorite pieces include the boat -- a wooden shape filled with massive Niijima Floats. These large spheres were inspired by Japanese fishing floats found along the shores of Puget Sound, a Chihuly childhood romping ground.

He also favors the Mille Fiore, an exotic garden of delights, exhibited for the first time on an oval platform. The vision of a glass Eden fills a gallery room with vividly colored leaves, reeds, shrubs and graceful swan-like figures. Neon tumbleweeds spark blue nearby and a Persian glass ceiling leads you in.

Although Chihuly experiments with neon, light and wooden boats, he remains true to his roots.

"I love glass," he explained.

Adjoining the Chihuly Collection is a glass blowing hot shop with artists, classes and seating for spectators. Nearby is the soon-to-open Salvador Dali Museum and the Museum of Fine Arts.










Today's News

September 23, 2010

Centre Pompidou Stages a Major Retrospective of the Work of Nouveaux Réaliste Arman

Jean Cocteau and Picasso Print and Ceramic Sales Make over £500,000 at Bonhams

Norton's Monet in Major Exhibition at the Grand Palais, Gauguin Goes to Tate

The Museo del Prado Identifies an Unknown Work by Pieter Bruegel the Elder

Phillips de Pury & Co. Announces Highlights from Contemporary Art Sale

Wallace Collection Presents French Drawings from Poussin to Seurat

Art Show by Rolling Stones' Ronnie Wood Starts Up in Ohio

Sotheby's Presents Its Strongest Ever Sale of Modern and Contemporary Arab and Iranian Art

Under Unusual Arrangement, in Austria, Castles Aren't Just for Kings

Artist Dale Chihuly Stretches Boundaries of Glass Blowing

The Saratoga Automobile Museum Presents Thirteen Woodies

National Geographic Magazine to Start Publishing in Arabic

Attila Szücs: The Hidden and the Revered at Priska C. Juschka Fine Art

Exhibition of New Sculptures by Franz West at Gagosian in Rome

Man Survives Passing Out with Head in Museum Noose

Frieze Magazine Announces Winner of 2010 Writer's Prize

Whitechapel Gallery Opens The London Art Book Fair 2010 Tomorrow

Bonhams to Sell Meissen Teapot Once Owned by Mother of George I for £200,000

Doris Lee Celebrates Life's Small Pleasures at D. Wigmore Fine Art

Prehispanic Roadway Explored by Archaeologists in Xochicalco

Old Master, Modern & Contemporary Prints Highlight Auction at Bonhams

The Pace Gallery Celebrates Its 50th Anniversary with Retrospective Shows

National Portrait Gallery Unveils a "Gothic" Portrait of Isabella Blow

Work by Gerhard Richter from the Weserburg Museum to Be Offered

Stockholm Based Artist Cecilia Edefalk Exhibits at Gladstone Gallery

Sale of Exploration and Travel at Christie's Achieves $2,590,380

Amazing Horned Dinosaurs Unearthed on "Lost Continent"

New York's Frick Museum Director, Anne L. Poulet, to Retire Next Year

Major Guillermo Kuitca Retrospective Opens Sperone Westwater's New Building

An Exhibition of Works on Paper by 8 Contemporary Artists at Jill Newhouse

Ashmolean Receives 1 Million Visitors to the New Museum Since It Reopened

ArtsWave Launches, Building on Success of Fine Arts Fund

Detroit Institute of Arts Participates in High-Tech Treasure Hunting Game

Lost Language Unearthed in a Letter Found in Peru

Portland Museum of Art's $3 million Gift from Emily Eaton Moore is Allocated




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful