Museum of Glass Calendar Highlights for April, 2011
All events are included with admission to the Museum unless otherwise noted. Calendar listings are subject to change. For updated information, please visit our website at www.museumofglass.org or call the information line at 253.284.4750 or 1.866.4MUSEUM.
FALL-WINTER-SPRING HOURS (through May 29):
Wednesday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday 12 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Third Thursdays 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Museum Store also open Tuesdays, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Public Programs
Family Day: Egg Animals
Saturday, April 9
1 - 4 p.m.
Join artist Jennifer Adams and bring new life to an ordinary egg by painting it as your favorite animal. The Comerford Irish Step Dancers return for their fourth annual performance; their lively dancing is sure to liven spring spirits! (Dance performances are at 1 and 3 pm).
Sponsored by City of Tacoma Arts Commission
Third Thursday ArtWalk
Thursday, April 21
Free admission 5 - 8 p.m. sponsored by City of Tacoma Arts Commission and Columbia Bank
Hot Shop
Feel the heat as you watch art come alive! Every day, artists demonstrate the intriguing process of creating works of art from molten glass on the amphitheater stage, giving visitors a birds-eye view of their activities. Expert commentary and a state-of-the-art audiovisual system enhance the experience by providing insight into the glassblowing process as well as the science, culture and historical aspects of glass.
April 13 - 17 Jocelyne Prince, Providence, RI
Jocelyne Prince is a conceptual artist working in glass and other sculptural media. She is an instructor in both the glass and digital media departments at Rhode Island School of Design. While in the Hot Shop, Prince plans to work with the Hot Shop Team to create large-scale cloud forms that will be used later in the residency to stage a live event referencing El Greco's Coronation of the Virgin. The clouds will lie at the base of a lift that will suspend a model. A photographer will document the event, allowing Prince to eventually create a large-scale triptych.
Hot Lunch
Fridays, 12 - 1 p.m.
Celebrate Friday at the Museum of Glass! Enjoy a box lunch from Gallucci's Glass Café while watching a featured or visiting artist at work in the Hot Shop. Cost: $12 per person plus Museum admission. Please call 253.826.1799 or email ron@galluccis.com to order your lunch by 3 p.m. Thursday. For more information, visit www.museumofglass.org http://www.museumofglass.org/ .
Studio
Weekdays 11 a.m. - 3 p.m.; Saturdays 12 - 4 p.m.; Sundays 1 - 4 p.m.
The Studio is an interactive, experiential learning space that provides visitors with creative opportunities for hands-on engagement with the ideas behind the glass. Activities are designed to engage all visitors, from toddlers to senior citizens. Each month a new hands-on art activity is presented that relates to a particular exhibition or Hot Shop application.
Self Made: Glass Fusing Experiences
Saturdays, 11 am - 4 pm; Sundays, 1 - 5 pm (no workshops on Saturday, May 7)
Join us for a new hands-on experience led by glass artist Keke Cribbs http://www.artparts.org/cribbsk/index.html . Use colorful glass shards, stringers and frit to create a one-of-a-kind glass tile that can be used for a coaster. Workshops start on the hour (45 minute duration); last session begins at 3 pm on Saturdays, 4 pm on Sundays.
Cost: $38 / $32 members (price does not include Museum admission). Suitable for ages 6 to adult
Reservations: 253.284.4719.
Kids Design Glass
Sponsored by Key Foundation, a foundation funded by KeyBank, and the Muckleshoot Charity Fund
Ongoing
Children under the age of 12
Our Kids Design Glass program invites children 12 and under who visit the Museum or are patients at Mary Bridge Children's Hospital to design a glass sculpture. Each month, one entry is selected by the MOG Hot Shop team. Two sculptures are created-one for the child designer and one for the Museum's Permanent Collection. A selection of Kids Design Glass creatures is currently on display in the Leonard and Norma Klorfine Gallery and Art Alley.
Selected designs will be created in the Hot Shop Sunday, April 24.
Lectures
Conversations with the Artists
Sponsored by PONCHO
Sundays at 2 p.m. in the Hot Shop
April 17 Jocelyne Prince
History of Glass Lecture Series
Sundays, 2 - 5 p.m. in the Hot Shop
Led by renowned, artist, teacher and historian Walter Lieberman, this informative and lively presentation series chronicles the history of glassmaking from Roman times to today's Studio Glass movement. Each session includes a 45-minute lecture followed by two hours of hot glassmaking demonstrations in the Hot Shop.
April 3 Art Nouveau Glass
April 10 Art Deco Glass
Theater
Documentaries
Every day, visitors can view original documentary films to expand their understanding of the artwork in the galleries, gain insight into the artistic process of a particular artist, or review the techniques and history of glassmaking. Films repeat throughout the day.
Ongoing Exhibitions
Masters of Studio Glass: Richard Craig Meitner
Organized by Corning Museum of Glass
Through June 19, 2011
Masters of Studio Glass showcases the work of American artist Richard Craig Meitner who is known for creating intellectual, poetic and eccentric glass objects embellished with rust, enamel, bronze, tile, paint and print. Drawing from a range of diverse influences including Italian painting, Japanese textiles, German Expressionism, science and nature, Meitner uses his art as a language to "visually speak" to his audience. The exhibition comprises work from 23 years of Meitner's career (1978-2001) and reflects his interest in glass for its qualities of mystery, fragility, and preciousness.
Glimmering Gone: Ingalena Klenell and Beth Lipman
Organized by Museum of Glass
Sponsored by Russell Investments, the Robert M. Minkoff Foundation, Linda & Gerry Nordberg, the Art Alliance for Contemporary Glass, and KUOW Public Radio
Through September 6, 2011
Glimmering Gone is an exhibition conceived and created by American artist Beth Lipman and Swedish artist Ingalena Klenell that comprises three large-scale installations of colorless and white glass-Landscape, Mementos and Artifacts. Experiential and interrelated, the artwork was produced by the artists individually in their home studios and collaboratively during a two-week Hot Shop residency at the Museum of Glass in January, 2010. The installations present a metaphor for material culture, landscape and life.
Fertile Ground: Recent Masterworks from the Visiting Artist Residency Program
Organized by Museum of Glass
Through October 16, 2011
The Museum of Glass Hot Shop serves as an incubator for ideas for a multigenerational community of glassblowers. Fertile Ground showcases 32 works made by artists from around the world with the expert assistance of the Museum's Hot Shop Team. The exhibition documents the artistry and craftsmanship, focused determination and physical stamina, camaraderie and shared commitment of the artists as they created these masterful works.
Kids Design Glass
Organized by Museum of Glass
Sponsored by Russell Investments, Key Bank/Key Foundation, Muckleshoot Charity Fund, Dale Chihuly and Leslie Jackson Chihuly, Carl and Jan Fisher, Janet and Mike Halvorson, Leonard and Norma Klorfine Foundation, Randall and Joyce Lert, Mr. and Mrs. George H. Weyerhaeuser, Sr., The News Tribune and Click! Cable TV
Through October 31, 2011
Kids Design Glass celebrates the imagination of children with 52 glass sculptures designed by kids and crafted by professional artists in the Museum of Glass Hot Shop. The Kids Design Glass education program, from which these creations originated, illustrates the symbiotic relationship between designer and glassblower. A child draws a design-generally a fantastical creature-names it, and writes a brief explanation or story. The Museum's Hot Shop Team selects one design each month and transforms the two-dimensional drawing into a three-dimensional sculpture. As the designer, the child directs the artists as they make two sculptures-one for the child to take home and one for the Museum's Permanent Collection. The children's drawings and artist statements are displayed alongside each piece.
Made at the Museum: The Visiting Artist Collection
Organized by Museum of Glass
Ongoing
The Visiting Artist Program brings artists from the region and around the world to the Museum of Glass to work with the Hot Shop team to explore, invent and create with glass. After each residency the Museum and the artist select one work of art to be included in the Permanent Collection. These objects are rotated on and off display throughout the year as new works are created.
Martin Blank (American, born 1962)
Fluent Steps, 2009
Hot-sculpted glass, steel
Museum of Glass Permanent Collection
Main Plaza Reflecting Pool
Martin Blank's Fluent Steps captures the essence of water. Fluent Steps spans the entire length of the 210-foot-long Main Plaza reflecting pool and rises from water level to fifteen feet in height. It consists of 754 individually hand-sculpted pieces of glass, most created in the Museum's Hot Shop during Blank's 45-day Visiting Artist residency in 2008. These forms are arranged into several islands that capture the fluidity, light, motion and transparency of water in clear glass.
The Museum of Glass provides a dynamic learning environment to appreciate the medium of glass through creative experiences, collections and exhibitions. In addition to the Hot Shop Amphitheater where visitors can watch artists work, the facilities include galleries, outdoor exhibition areas, a theater, hands-on art studio, grand hall, café and store.
Hours and Admission
Open Wednesday through Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Third Thursdays 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., Sunday 12 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Store is also open Tuesdays 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Summer hours (Memorial Day through Labor Day): also open Monday and Tuesday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Closed July 30, 2011, Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day. Admission is free for members, $12 general, $10 seniors, military and students (13+ with ID), $10 groups of 10 or more, $5 children (6-12) years old. Children under 6 are admitted free. Admission is free every third Thursday of the month from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Info Line 253-284-4750/ 1-866-4MUSEUM
Museum of Glass, 1801 Dock Street Tacoma, WA 98402
www.museumofglass.org http://www.museumofglass.org/
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Tacoma-WA/Museum-of-Glass/62210295931?ref=sgm http://twitter.com/#!/MOGTacoma http://www.youtube.com/museumofglass
For more information about the Museum of Glass: Susan Newsom, Communications Manager, 253.284.4732, snewsom@museumofglass.org mailto:jpisto@museumofglass.org