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  2. Pilchuck Glass School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilchuck_Glass_School

    Pilchuck Glass School is an international center for glass art education. The school was founded in 1971 by Dale Chihuly, Ruth Tamura, Anne Gould Hauberg (1917-2016), and John H. Hauberg (1916-2002). [1] The campus is located on a former tree farm in Stanwood, Washington, in the United States. The administrative offices are located in Seattle.

  3. Christopher Ries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Ries

    His larger sculptures are taken from source material that can weigh over 4,000 pounds, and the process of reducing and polishing can take as much as a year. [10] Ries's Opus was at the time of its creation the world's largest monolithic glass sculpture. It weighs nearly 1,500 pounds (680 kilograms) and was sculpted from a 3,000 pounds (1,400 ...

  4. Dale Chihuly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dale_Chihuly

    Chihuly earned a Master of Fine Arts degree in sculpture from the RISD in 1968. That same year, he was awarded a Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation grant for his work in glass, as well as a Fulbright Fellowship. [4] He traveled to Venice to work at the Venini factory on the island of Murano, where he first saw the team approach to blowing glass. [7]

  5. Michael Taylor (glass artist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Taylor_(glass_artist)

    Michael Taylor (born 1944) is an American studio glass artist, teacher and lecturer. His best known body of work is his geometric glass sculptures. He works the glass cold, shaping, polishing and laminating translucent colored and clear blocks of glass together using epoxy resin.

  6. Washington Glass School - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Washington_Glass_School

    Logo of the Washington Glass School. The Washington Glass School was founded [1] in 2001 by Washington, DC area artists Tim Tate and Erwin Timmers. The school teaches classes [2] on how to make kiln cast, fused, and cold worked glass sculptures and art. It is the second largest warm glass school in the United States. [3] [4]

  7. Art glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_glass

    Art glass is a subset of glass art, this latter covering the whole range of art made from glass. Art glass normally refers only to pieces made since the mid-19th century, and typically to those purely made as sculpture or decorative art , with no main utilitarian function, such as serving as a drinking vessel, though of course stained glass ...

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  9. Glass art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_art

    Kiln-formed glass sculpture "United Earth" by Tomasz Urbanowicz. Several of the most common techniques for producing glass art include: blowing, kiln-casting, fusing, slumping, pâté-de-verre, flame-working, hot-sculpting and cold-working. Cold work includes traditional stained glass work as well as other methods of shaping glass at room ...