Level 2, 68 Glebe Point Road, Glebe NSW 2037. Sydney Australia. Tel/Fax +612 9552 1552.
Open Wednesday to Saturday 11am–5pm. Any other time: appointments welcome.
While we are re-structuring the Glebe premises, we will be POPPING UP at the Rocks!! Visit us at 140 George Street (just up from shop entrance to the MCA) from 3 September - 13th October.
First up is PRELUDE a collection that acquaints the public with Glass Artists from Glebe, exhibiting works which show a broad variety of recent glassmaking styles.
Our second exhibition in the pop-up space is "COMMENTS IN GLASS"
Part of ART & ABOUT an exhibition featuring artists who use narratives in their work.
Maureen Cahill, Deb Cocks, Spike Deane, Mark Eliott, Sue Hawker, Wayne Pearson and Philippa Playford.
Pop up…
Continue reading GLASS ARTISTS’ GALLERY POPS-UP @ THE ROCKS
10 September 2013
10 September 2013
10 September 2013
Recent Graduates and emerging artists
28th August - 30 September
Artists:
Anastasia Liolio, Annabelle Davidson, Hayley Carpenter, Mikyoung Jung, Jennifer Ashley King, Katie-Ann Houghton, Mark Ammermann, Sarah Davis, Spike Deane, Tegan Hamilton & Ruth McCallum…
Continue reading Launch
28 August 2012
Thursday 10 May - Sunday 10 June 2012
Highlighting an eclectic group of emerging and established artists working in glass and mixed media who have been asked to interpret ideas within the scale of A4.
Artists are:
Mark Ammerman
Andy Baldwin
Michaela Burgess
Emma Borland
Mark Eliott
Tevita Havea
Kate King
Peter Minson
Sergio Redegalli
Alex Tam
Emily Valentine
Mark…
Continue reading Small works: A4³
4 May 2012
Wayne has been studying glass at Sydney College of the Arts since 2004 and is currently completing his PhD.
His extensive background is as a teacher in visual arts and education. Since he left teaching Wayne has specialized in monumental sculptural casts and reverse painting on glass.
He has had multiple entries as Ranamok Glass Prize finalist and has his work in national and overseas collections.
His is a leading exponent of the traditional technique of reverse painting on glass. This he uses as a contemporary application in his highly regarded portraits, one of which was a finalist in the Doug Moran Portraiture…
Continue reading Pearson, Wayne
29 March 2012
Susie has been working with glass for over 20 years, exhibiting her work extensively both in Australia and internationally.
In her items of jewellery, she combines glass with a wide range of materials, such as rubber, buttons and springs, as well as aluminium. She approaches each piece as a canvas for self-expression, producing works that are innovative and distinctly…
Continue reading Barnes, Susie
29 March 2012
Sue Hawker spent most of her working career as a journalist in the international media scene.
Sue mainly works from her home studio overlooking the beautiful waters of the Bay Of Islands in New Zealand. Sue works in cast glass and pate de verre, which she has reinterpreted to produce large-scale vessels complex in both colour and texture.
“These vessels, or containers of the spiritual, cock a snoot at minimalism and invite the viewer to engage in a simple, joyous moment.”
Sue was the winner of the Ranamok Glass Prize in 2010 and has been a finalist multiple…
Continue reading Hawker, Sue
28 March 2012
Clare grew up near Portsmouth, Hampshire in the UK and studied Glass and Architectural glass at The Edinburgh College of Art in Edinburgh, Scotland. She most recently has worked at an independent studio in the JamFactory in South Australia. Her background in textiles plays large part in the development of her work with a focus on colour, pattern and…
Continue reading Wilson, Clare
28 March 2012
Born in Perth, Western Australia she completed her education at the Edith Cowan University in 2004. She see herself as “Fundamentally a glass artist, specializing in pâté de verre glass casting”,
“I interpret design and form as a commentary of our emotional response to objects adding ornamentation in their exaltation. Glass is challenging and I aim to exhibit intricate and crafted sculptures recreating intricate designs in colour and textures.”
Her work is often about the loss of something as with the flummeries, where the beautiful is expendable. She also creates lace in a variety of forms such as item of lace or…
Continue reading Pepper, Denise
28 March 2012