Category: Glass
Alison Blanchard
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Alison Blanchard
I have been a fused glass artist since 2017 and honed my craft through various courses either in person or online. I was inspired to become a fused glass artist after having seen Sioban Jonesโs work at Art in Action at Waterperry. I subsequently did one of her courses in Worthing and loved it. I now have a studio at home and have a lot of fun โplayingโ! I mainly do fused glass but have also ventured into stained glass and cast glass more recently.
Much of my fused glass art is inspired by nature and flowers are a particular love of mine. The challenge of recreating them in glass either in 2D, as a picture, or 3D, as garden art, is exciting. I have a range of large and small garden art flowers โ poppies, daisies, lilies and buttercups which can be โplantedโ in your garden and provide colour all year round or displayed in your home and look particularly stunning if intermingled with real flowers. I also have some bright flower decorations to hang in your window along with some stand-alone flowers which have their own stands to cheer up any windowsill.
Colour is another passion of mine and beautiful sunsets have inspired my pendant collection. My favourites are the purples although the orange hues come a very close second. Each pendant is constructed of three layers of glass and requires two to three kiln firings to complete but remains elegant. To this collection I have added seascape pendants which capture the essence of holidays by the seaside.
In addition, I make various dishes and platters in a range of wonderful bold and vibrant colours. These come under the useful and useless (display only!) categories but always bring joy. They range in size from small ring dishes (approx 8x8cm) to large round bowls with a diameter of 29cm and all sizes and shapes in between. They can be used for a variety of functional purposes or to bring colour to a room.
More recently I have been doing some casting a very long complicated process of making a 3D object in glass. It uses the lost wax process which involves making a mould, using it to make a wax model and then making a refractory mould from the wax model. Steaming the wax out before melting the glass into the mould. This glass piece then needs refining and polishing. The end results are very rewarding and I now have a lovely collection of glass โeggsโ and some glass lemons.
My work is on sale during Artweeks and at a local gallery. Enquiries and commissions are welcome!
Wendy Newhofer
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Wendy Newhofer
Originally trained as a primary school teacher, I found that working part time allowed me to pursue my interests in art. A relocation to Oxford twelve years ago gave me the opportunity to return to college and do a Foundation in Art and Design where I first encountered kiln formed glass and was immediately captivated by the process.
I spent three years studying 3D glass in London before setting up my purpose built garden studio. Using sheets of float glass I make expressive pieces that have a painterly quality to them. Inclusions of metal leaf and wire enable me to โdrawโ within the glass and there is a magical alchemy, sometimes unpredictable, which produces a palette of subtle colours when the glass is fired.My work has always capitalised on my love of drawing which involve translating images from my sketchbook into the glass and I frequently work with repeated images creating patterns I make wall panels in various sizes and beautiful glass which will enhance any garden. Most recently I have been using photography to design mini landscapes based on journeys Iโve taken. My studio is open during Oxfordshire Artweeks every year and I sell my work through exhibitions and galleries.
Tlws Johnson
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Tlws Johnson
I was a very mature student when I enrolled in High Wycombe College to do a degree in ceramics and glass. I graduated much older and wiser in 1996 and decided to put my newfound knowledge to work. With the aid of Southern Arts Council I set up my workshop in Gawcott, near Buckingham and began making artistic glass by the kiln formed method which melts the glass either to fuse and slump the glass or to melt the glass into a preformed mould.
I welcome visitors to my workshop during Bucks Open Studios in June where they can โhave-a-goโ at making a small fused pendant. Throughout the year I give both beginners and advanced classes in my well-equipped studio. Clients who would like me to make a piece of glass for them are especially welcomed and I take great delight in making a beautiful piece which will meet all their requirements and will be stunningly unique. Recently I have made a window for an oak door, a sink splash-back with matching soap dish and seven large panels for an unusual curved stairwell. One of my cast glass sculptures was given as a leaving present to the retiring treasurer of the Aylesbury Vale Arts Council.
Pam Armitage
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Pam Armitage
I worked as a psychotherapist for many years and in my 50s decided to take my artistic talents seriously. After studying Fine Arts Foundation at Abingdon College, I started stained glass classes with Vital Peeters and discovered Glass Fusion. This technique involves special glass called Bullseye, which is cut and then fused in a kiln and can subsequently be slumped into a shape. The alchemical nature of the process and the vibrant colours of the glass captured my imagination and have inspired me ever since.
I have exhibited in Oxfordshire Artweeks, at Arts-Inc Gallery in Freeland and the Creative Arts Gallery in Woodstock.
I am delighted to accept commissions.
pamarmitage@googlemail.com
01865 424699
Michael Berger
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Michael Berger
Working with fused glass began after I retired, instructed by John Dunn at his studio in Brighton and followed by a training in leaded (stained) glass work with John Vaukins in Didcot. Continuing training happens via talking with others, working in fused glass, and the very helpful videos available the Internet. These sources inspire me to experiment with a variety of techniques including metal inclusions, mica powder, glass paints, decals and special firing techniques.
Inspiration has derived from various sources, from the Inca of Mexico to Paul Klee, M.C. Escher and most recently, Mondrian, developing variations of his ideas using computer graphics and converting the design to glass pieces to create the final work. I also use abstract patterns and shapes in nature for inspiration. The challenge with glass, not always realised, is to create something that emerges from a night the kiln that captures my intentions.
Judith Berger
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Judith Berger
I worked as a clinical neuropsychologist for many years but on retirement began to work in fused glass.
I have painted all my life and this has influenced the themes of my work in glass. Apart from Art O Level in the 60s I have had no formal training in arts, but have attended art classes and various short courses on fused glass over the last ten years or so.
Using Bullseye glass which has a wide range of colours, I am inspired by landscape, waterscape and nature.
By cutting glass and assembling it a little like collage, and adding powdered glass and inclusions prior to fusing, it is possible to create the depth, light and fluidity of nature in glass. For instance, water, leaves and trees are a particular inspiration.
I work at home in my garden studio, and have exhibited during Oxford Artweeks, and at Guild Exhibitions such as Woodstock Christmas Show, in the Oxfordshire Soldiers Museum, Broad Street Market, Oxford, and in April, 2017 at Cornerstone Window Walls, Didcot.
I am happy to accept commissions.
judithamiddleton@gmail.com
www.cfglass.co.uk
01865512952
Helen Slater
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Helen Slater
Helen has recently completed a practice based research PhD in glass, at The Royal College of Art, in order to develop her practice further.
Based in Oxfordshire, Helen Slaterโs artwork draws inspiration from the figurative and its perception within changing environments. By using a mixture of techniques similar to those used in bronze casting and some specially developed by Helen herself, through years of research, she is able to produce stunning one off Art pieces. These unique glass pieces vary in scale from dramatic life size figures, to be displayed outdoors, to delicate tabletop casts for interiors.
From her workshop in Kingham, Oxfordshire, she takes great pride in providing a personal bespoke service, creating original stunning glass sculptural pieces for home & garden in addition to works for gallery exhibition. Helen also offer a range of glass workshops for beginners and more advanced glass practitioners. In Addition, helen is a University Lecturer, on a part-time basis and is an External Examiner for the University of Wales, Trinity of St. David
helenslaterglass@aol.com
www.helenslaterglass.com
07763 117492