Find

GLASS ART SOCIETY UNVEILS 2ND ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ONLINE EXHIBITION & JURIED SELECTION CATALOGUE

December 19, 2014 - In June of last year, the Glass Art Society launched its first-ever International Student Online Exhibition, a great new opportunity for student members to present their work to glass professionals, enthusiasts and fellow students from across the globe. Due to the success of the 2013 exhibition, GAS once again put out a call for members currently enrolled full-time in a degree-granting program to submit images of their work. All submissions are original, professionally crafted, contain glass as the main element and designed/created between 2013-2014. Seventy-eight students, representing 30 schools from 8 different countries, participated this year.

Posted 23 December 2014

Share this:
|

In addition to the online exhibition, a number of students were selected for inclusion in the digital Juried Selection Catalogue, which features the 1st, 2nd and 3rd place winners, honorable mentions, and additional selected works. The jurors were artist Laura Donefer; artist and curator at Bullseye Projects, Michael Endo; and owner of Morgan Contemporary Glass Gallery, Amy Morgan.

“After reviewing the work of all these talented people, I came to the happy conclusion that art being created with glass is alive and well in the world today, and that the new generation of artists are indeed bounding forward. There seems to be a technical virtuosity married to a deep conceptual sophistication, with many of the works being hauntingly profound,” says Donefer.

First place went to Alfred University graduate student, Josh Hershman for his piece titled, Derealization, which employs functioning cast glass cameras to “manipulate light and encourage alternate ways of looking at photography by allowing the optical and fluid qualities of glass to bring new meaning and depth to the photographic image.” Kate Clements from Tyler School of Art at Temple University was awarded second place. Her installation, Untitled (WALL) is comprised of over 40 separate lace-like, kiln-fired frit pieces and is inspired by the Amber Room and front gate at Catherine Place in Russia. University of Michigan student, Mary Ayling received third place with a cast glass ‘relic’ of her mouth, created during a live performace titled, Shaping Silence.

The digital Juried Selection Catalogue can be accessed through issuu.com
The complete Online Exhibition, featuring the work of 78 students, is displayed on the Glass Art Society website.
 
More information: Glass Art Society  
glassart.org

article
article
Copyright © 2013-2019  Glass is more!        Copyright, privacy, disclaimer