![]() |
![]() |
||||
![]() |
|||||
|
|
|||||
![]() |
|||||
|
|
|||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
For the past two years, I’ve attended a Professional Artist in Residency program at the Pilchuck Glass School in Stanwood, Washington, privately organized by Steve Klein and Richard
Parrish. Bullseye Glass co-sponsored by generously supplying our materials. Our task was to individually
work on projects that would further our art, explore a new direction or perhaps
work out solutions to an ongoing challenge. We had the support of morning
roundtable discussions to ask for feedback, work out concerns and share
successes.
After the 2009 session, I returned to the studio with the inkling of a new
direction I wanted to pursue, which was to experiment with depth and imagery in
thicker pieces.
As we wrapped up our 2010 session, we were thrilled to hear that the Museum of Northwest Art in La Conner, Washington was interested in us as a group exhibit.
I returned home in September anxious to expand my concept beyond the test pieces
I’d made at Pilchuck but needed
|
to dedicate myself to ARTrails Open Studio preparations, which took most of my
time until mid-October. With a deadline of December 1st for photos of my
submissions, November was spent experimenting, sketching, assembling,
reassembling, troubleshooting and firing my new body of work.
I emailed photographs of five pieces (on December 1st!) and learned a few weeks
later that all five had been curated into the show, which opened on March 12,
2011. I’m proud to be included with this amazingly generous and talented group of
artists and I’m so excited with the possibilities I see in these new wall works.
I invite you to visit the Museum’s link and check out fellow artist Steve Immerman’s virtual-tour video and the Pilchuck Residency video by Bullseye Glass.
Shown below on the left is the test piece and on the right, one of my finished
wall pieces, entitled Do you?
|