Tag Archives: April Surgent

////Glass Town USA + say bye bye to the viaduct////

With SOFA Chicago right around the corner, there is certainly a buzz among the locals (glass artists that is) about the show in Chicago on Nov 4th. Around this time everybody is busy getting work photographed, packed up and shipped off to the windy city for the biggest Sculptural Objects and Functional Art show in the country. Everybody likes to speculate on the climate of the show and how powerful sales will be this year. Well from what I have heard, so far… so good. I have been graced with some pre-show sales (In Urbanism, at left) and lots of positive feedback about the new work!

 

 

With that in mind I wanted to tell you about this great new blog that a friend of mine; Grace Meils has been writing about Seattle glass. Grace has had a much respected voice in the community for a long time and has worked for many arts organizations including Pratt Fine Art Center, Pilchuck Glass School and the Traver Gallery for which she is currently a gallery director.

The blog is called Glass Town USA  and its provided a much need fresh perspective into the eclectic glass community here in Seattle.  So check it out often!

 

Oh yeah and …… This is going on right outside the Bemis building.

I took these pictures from the front door. The Alaskan Way Viaduct, build in the 1950′s has met its match. Most thought us thought it would be a giant earthquake that would take the elevated highway down, but the bulldozers got there first. April actually made a piece about it once. It was called ” An afternoon with Ethan”

 

Were gonna miss it (I think).

There is something about its dirtiness, its concrete legs and the view, OMG the view driving down that highway on a sunny summer day (one of three we usually have) was amazing. Seeing the Olympic Mountains towering over Puget Sound to the west and the Seattle skyline to the east just made you feel like everything you were going places (which you were because you had to be driving to see that view). Bye Bye Viaduct, your future friend the deep bore tunnel will most certainly not have as much street cred as you did. We will miss you.

Posted in April Surgent, friends, inspiration, New Work, Pilchuck, SOFA, travel, Uncategorized | Also tagged , , , , , , , 1 Comment

///Summer Re-Cap///

Its been a crazy one!

From my residency at TMOG in May :

 

Once June hit I was off and running. With the GAS conference here in Seattle this year we saw an influx of hundreds of glass makers from all over the world converge on the emerald city for a weekend, networking, lecturing, flexing and partying like rock stars. What a blast!

The week after that, I flew to the Pittsburgh Glass Center to teach a week long workshop. The class at PGC was titled “Out of the round” and it was amazing.  With students from stateside and abroad it was the most challenging class I’ve taught to date due to the high skill level of the students. Instead of teaching them how to gather the glass, I was teaching them new ways to approach the entire blowing process.  Sculpting the bubble was priority number one and they all got down and dirty with paddles, corks and blow punties.

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After Pittsburgh I came back to Seattle and met up with my intern Kameron Robinson.  Kameron is a senior at Anderson University in Indiana.

He contacted me after I had visited his school and done some demos in the glass shop. He was interested in getting some experience in a professional artist studio. WOW! makes me feel legit.  This was my second time having a summer intern and I hope to continue next summer with someone new.

Kameron turned out to be a cold working machine and a hell of a guy. his first time west of the Missouri and he was loving summer in Seattle. The month of July flew by with Kameron and I working in the shop day in day out.

Thanks Kameron, you rock !

 

 

 

Once August hit I was off to Maine to the Haystack Mountain School of Craft to be a teaching assistant for my good friend and great artist Kait Rhoads. It was truly an amazing experience. I slept very little and blew glass alot. It was a cane and murrini class so we were pulling on the glass until the we hours of the night. The students were amazing and my fellow TA Zach Compton from Star, N.C. was the shit!

From Haystack I went straight to Pilchuck to be the Cold shop Cordinator for the fifth session of the summer. It was amazing! Lino Tagliapietra was there and I was lucky enough to be able to do some cold working for him. was I nervouse? Na…..not at all. He’s only the best glassblower alive today. Not to mention a very generous and wonderful man. April Surgent (my studio mate) was there teaching a class with her mentor and master engraver Jiri Harcuba for the Czech Republic. I will be posting a video of Jiri engraving a portrait of April soon on my blog and my youtube channel. I always have a blast at Pilchuck and I am so glad they ask me back every summer.

So now…finally I am back in the studio full time working on my next exhibition. This fall The Traver Gallery will be representing me at SOFA Chicago. It’s kind of a big deal and I’m really excited! They are only bringing four artists and the booth will be beautiful. So if you’re in Chicago November 3rd through the 6th come check it out.

Here is a couple shots of the work I am making for SOFA:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

oh yeah and here’s my lunch:

Posted in April Surgent, coldworking, friends, Glass, Glass Blowing, Life, New Work, Pilchuck, SOFA, teaching, travel, Uncategorized, WWO | Also tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , Leave a comment

///WWWO///

///What We’re Working On///

New wall panels, blown and slumped like old window glass. Once the pieces are flat they are engraved.

“Future Forward I” 18″x18″ each

South window 2/14/11

April Surgent’s new panels commission by a client in Norfolk, Virginia. The imagery on these panels came from her photographs taken on a recent trip to Norfolk.

Zak (the squirrel) in Prague. This piece is fresh from the kiln!

Posted in April Surgent, coldworking, friends, Glass, Glass Blowing, New Work, travel, WWO | Also tagged , , , , , , , , , , , 2 Comments

American Craft features Pilchuck’s 40th Anniversary

The new American Craft Magazine features and article commerating Pilchuck Glass School’s upcoming 40th birthday with a profile of 13 artists including Dale Chihuly, Dante Marioni, Einar and Jamex de la Torre, myself, April Surgent, Matthew Szosz, Judith Schaechter, Joyce Scott, Mark Zirpel, Deborah Moore, Richard Marquis and David Willis. The article consists of short profiles/interviews of each artist discussing their work and their relationship to Pilchuck.  I am honored to be included in this piece among some very accomplished artists. Pilchuck has certainly been integral to my experience and will continue to be a place were creativity and expression reign. (some times literally raining, we’re talking buckets!) If you dont have a hard copy check it out at American Craft Magazine.

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