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Crafted Architecture, An Investigation into Handcrafted Glass TechniquesKrissberg, Alex January 2018 (has links)
This paper is an investigation into the crossroads of traditional and contemporary glass craft techniques. Through innovative methods in the workshop I have set out to bring glass into the public sphere using the potential for handcraft in architecture.
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The American Studio Glass Movement: A Regional Study of its Birth in Northwest OhioHarrington, Kaysie Marie 26 November 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Professionalization of Studio Glass ArtistsStevelt, Kelly A. January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Process in glass art : a study of some technical and conceptual issuesHemp, Doreen 11 1900 (has links)
Glass has been made and used for centuries but South African artists, isolated for the last three
decades, are only now becoming aware of the potential of hot or warm glass as an art medium. In
antiquity glass objects were created using various processes but the 'factory' tradition began with
the discovery of the blowing iron in the first century AD. The invention of the tank furnace in the
late 1950s revolutionised modem production, enabling individual artists to make glass in private
studios without blowing teams. The research describes ancient.. glassmaking processes and
indicates how they have been explored, adapted and used by contemporary artists world wide,
challenging craft orientated paradigms, and proving that glass is a viable and important sculpture
medium. The practical research demonstrates the application of many processes and relates
technical issues to sculptural concepts which are realized through the physical and material
properties of glass. / Art History, Visual Arts & Musicology / M.A. (Fine Art)
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Process in glass art : a study of some technical and conceptual issuesHemp, Doreen 11 1900 (has links)
Glass has been made and used for centuries but South African artists, isolated for the last three
decades, are only now becoming aware of the potential of hot or warm glass as an art medium. In
antiquity glass objects were created using various processes but the 'factory' tradition began with
the discovery of the blowing iron in the first century AD. The invention of the tank furnace in the
late 1950s revolutionised modem production, enabling individual artists to make glass in private
studios without blowing teams. The research describes ancient.. glassmaking processes and
indicates how they have been explored, adapted and used by contemporary artists world wide,
challenging craft orientated paradigms, and proving that glass is a viable and important sculpture
medium. The practical research demonstrates the application of many processes and relates
technical issues to sculptural concepts which are realized through the physical and material
properties of glass. / Art History, Visual Arts and Musicology / M.A. (Fine Art)
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Forming a New Art in the Pacific Northwest: Studio Glass in the Puget Sound Region, 1970-2003Ryder, Marianne 03 June 2013 (has links)
The studio glass movement first arose in the United States in the early 1950s, and was characterized by practitioners who wanted to divorce glass from its industrial associations and promote it as a fine arts medium. This movement began in a few cities in the eastern part of the country, and in Los Angeles, but gradually emerged as an art form strongly associated with the city of Seattle and the Puget Sound region. This research studies the emergence and growth of the studio glass movement in the Puget Sound region from 1970 to 2003. It examines how glass artists and Seattle's urban elites interacted and worked separately to build the support structures and "art world" that provided learning and mentoring opportunities, workspaces, artistic validation, audience development, critical and financial support, which helped make glass a signature Puget Sound art form, and the role that artist social networks, social capital, cultural capital and cultural policy played in sustaining this community. In particular, the research seeks to explore the factors that nourish a new art form and artist community in second-tier cities that do not have the substantial cultural and economic support structures found in the "arts super cities" such as Los Angeles, New York City, and San Francisco. This study contributes to the growing literature on artist communities, and the roles played by social capital, cultural capital, urban growth coalitions and policy at different stages of community development. Results can assist policymakers in formulating policies that incorporate the arts as a form of community development.
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