Master in GlassLISA SAMPHIRE
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Lisa
Samphire began her career
in 1985 and today is one of the West
Coast’s leading glass artists. Most recently she has been working with
the murrini technique, a painstaking and time-consuming process that
results in mosaic glass works of dazzling complexity. Standard murrini
pieces are opaque and the designs tend towards stacked uniformity.
Samphire has gone in another direction. Her works are
semi-translucent and the patterning is asymmetrical, organic,
open-ended, and visually arresting. Undulating lines disrupted by
squares and rectangular forms appear scattershot across the surface.
After each piece is blown, Samphire roughens the surface to bring out
the richness of colour and sharpen up the contrasting design
elements. Standing back and viewing a work frontally, the dense
interplay of lines and modular forms appears to flatten out, creating a
remarkable illusion of flux in which each piece flutters between two
and three dimensions. The tension is very entertaining, and the bold
and innovative advance of colour and form, so unexpected in a
three-dimensional medium, is mesmerizing.
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Samphire has been inspired, in
part, by the work of
Austrian artist and architect Fritz Hundertwasser (1928 - 2000) who
created brightly coloured mosaic works derived from vegetative forms in
which irregularity was the key theme. His stated purpose was to emulate
the growth patterns in nature and, to this end, he associated himself
with an artistic sensibility that was pre-modern and pre-industrial. So
too does Samphire, and perhaps this is appropriate, given the nature of
glass work and its foundation in pre-industrial craft traditions.
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Apart
from the work of Hundertwasser, Samphire has
studied Persian carpets, Iranian textiles, and shawls from the Kashmir
valley region of India. Woven baskets created by the indigenous peoples
of the southwestern United States have been an additional source of
inspiration. Certainly the irregular play of lines in her vessels,
crimped here or elongating there as if conforming to a rhythm not of
their own making, appear to emulate the “imperfections” of woven
materials.
The passage of time inscribed in the making are
features that distinguish Samphire’s productions. They call attention
to her indebtedness to nature-derived forms as a metaphor for process,
evolution, growth, and transition. Indeed, Samphire has
self-consciously taken this metaphorical sensibility one step further
by paying homage to the patterning of nature itself. Works such
as Greentail, Swallowtail,
Crescentspots, Atala Butterfly, and Fritillaries take
inspiration from different species of butterfly whose
delicate abstract markings mirror the infinite diversity of their
environments. |
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MORNA TUDOR

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Morna
Tudor has been active since the mid-1980s as an artist, teacher,
and writer. In addition she has served as guest artist at
Sheridan College and the Alberta College of Art and Design, garnered
numerous national and international awards, and racked up an impressive
list of exhibitions in Canada and the United States. Glass sculptures
such as Dulce de Decorum Est
from her Sphere Series placed
a premium on
the intimate relationship between viewers and the art work. The Sphere
Series contrasted plain exteriors with rich interiors decorated
in high
temperature enamels and Paradise paints. These works can be cupped in
two hands and are intended to be held, tilted back and forth, and
carefully examined. In the process, the standard “static” visual
experience gives way to temporal contingencies and a slow exploration
of the painted interiors.
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Tudor’s Sphere Series offers an interesting
comparison with the break that the minimalist school of sculptors —
notably Donald Judd and Robert Morris — made in the mid-1960s from the
premium placed on visual immediacy by Anthony Caro and his high
modernist counterparts. Minimalist sculpture could not be taken in at a
glance (and often it was impossible to do so). You had to move around
and through it to experience it. So, too, with Tudor’s work. Like her
minimalist predecessors, she forces temporality and bodily experience
into the aesthetic equation, and she does so with a light dash of
humour. Her Spheres lack stable bases, so when you touch a work it
rocks and sways, as if to say, “time is dynamic and so am I!” |
| Her latest pieces — richly
decorated shallow bowls
sporting wide borders in a single colour — are created using graal and
incalmo processes. First, a thick egg- shaped glass blank is blown,
cooled, and sandblasted. Next, high temperature paints are applied to
create the decorative interior. Once dried, the painted graal is heated
again and encased in clear glass. The final form — with coloured rim —
is then worked up through the incalmo process, an Italian term
describing the conjoining of separately blown bubbles and their
amalgamation into a single piece. This allows for completely different
colour applications as sections of a work are added on. The end result
is a shallow bowl with a wide monotone rim demarcated by a narrow inner
ring of solid contrasting colour that, in turn, “frames” brilliant
swirls of mixed colour and Kandinsky-inspired painterly forms
decorating the bowl. In some instances the colour mix in the bowl
appears to “lick” the edges of the enclosing ring, suggesting that what
first looks like a seemingly crystal-clear demarcation is really a
disguise for the glass work’s original, malleable state. This lyrical
interplay between solidity and fluidity is a breathtaking tour de
force. |
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GARY BOLT
| The third artist in the Starfish
triumvirate, Gary Bolt, graduated in
1986 from the glass program at Sheridan College in Ontario. Since
then he has served as director of the British Columbia Glass Art
Association and as design consultant for the City of Victoria. Along
with occasional teaching and guest artist residencies during the past
two decades, his extensive exhibition record spans the continent. |
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Artistically,
Bolt is preoccupied with glass’s
paradoxical qualities. Glass is a weighty material that, at the same
time, is infinitely malleable, transparent, and seemingly ethereal.
These are the elements Bolt foregrounds in his sand-cast sculptures
which begin as blown glass forms embedded in heavy orbs of molten
glass. After cooling, the orb is cut through with a diamond saw and
polished to reveal multicoloured solid and linear glass forms suspended
within the interior. The technique is rife with possibilities, ranging
from the evocation of fossilized oceanic underworlds to the starry
expanse above us, or some imaginary play with compasses and rulers on a
draftsman’s table. Crystalline and precise, the sculptures are an
emphatically “invented” denaturalizations of the real. The smaller
sculptures encased in glass look more like drawings or paintings than
three-dimensional forms, and yet their three-dimensional qualities are
precisely what engross us. Mounted on rotating armatures or resting
like a stone or shell whose secrets await discovery, the illusionist
tension in Bolt’s work is utterly captivating.
Imagine these three talents working together on a
daily basis and you have a hint of what awaits gallery-goers at
Starfish Glassworks. More than friends and colleagues, this is a team
of artists embarked on a shared adventure who exchange ideas while
pushing each other forward to the
next challenge.
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Allan Antliff, Canada Research Chair in Modern Art at the University of
Victoria, is author of Anarchist Modernism: Art, Politics, and the
First American Avant-Garde (2001) and editor of Only a Beginning: An
Anarchist Anthology (2004).
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