Talking Out Your Glass podcast
Arts:Visual Arts
The American Flag, Acid Capsules and the F Word
Freely sharing his knowledge of the techniques he learned in Venice - murrine, millefiori and glassblowing - Richard Marquis demonstrated and taught throughout the United States, Europe, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand. The effect of Venetian glassblowing techniques on American studio glass enabled artists to expand their technical vocabularies and, combined with new and experimental approaches, led to the redefinition of glass as an artistic medium. Part one in a two-part series.
Jonathan Capps’ Global Practice of Interdisciplinary Collaboration, Social Engagement, and Cultural Exchange
David Graeber: Preserving Nature for Eternity in a Paperweight
Morgan Peterson: Winner of Blown Away 4
Clifford Rainey: A Life's Travelogue in Cast Glass
The State of Stained Glass
Kazuki Takizawa Uses Glass Art to Address Mental Health Issues
Jessica Loughlin’s Kiln Formed Glass: An Homage to the Observation of Light
The Glass Galaxies of Josh Simpson
Wesley Fleming: Flameworking the Realism of the Microcosmos
Robin and Julia Rogers: A Collaboration Resulting in Provocative Glass Sculpture
Flameworking 2024: Perspectives
Indre Bileris: Mastering Design and Painting for Liturgical, Educational, and Residential Glass Projects
Deanna Clayton’s Figurative and Decorative Pate de Verre Vessels
Daniel Clayman: Capturing Light in Cast Glass Sculpture and Large-Scale Installations
A Pursuit of Perfection: Jack Storms’ Cold-Fusion Glass Sculptures
Pioneering Cold Worked Glass: David Huchthausen’s Mysterious Fourth Dimension
Hunting Studio Glass: Creating Beautiful Blown and Cast Glass as a Canvas for Signature Murrini
Glass Knitting by Carol Milne
Kenneth von Roenn: The Architectural Application of Expressive Glass
Forging New Paths: The Stained Glass Association of America’s 2023 Conference
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Spider-Man Crawlspace Podcast
The Week in Art
Art Sense
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
Anne of Green Gables
Harlem Is Everywhere: The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism
The Art Angle