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American Craft Council Shows
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![]() Hugh McKay, Tsaar, cast leaded crystal 10"x14"x14" |
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Intricately cut and assembled
sculptures of paper. Brightly colored porcelain horns that actually can be played. Lamps
made of different colored elegant papers that have been sprayed into place. Multicolored
painted silk lighting fixtures that look like exotic insects.
Whoever said there was nothing new under the sun?
The unbounded creativity and inexhaustible imaginations of American
craftsmen never cease turning out objects of beauty and wonder--some utilitarian and some
for the sheer art of it.
The American Craft
Council is a 60-year-old nonprofit educational organization dedicated to promoting
understanding and appreciation of contemporary American craft. The Council was the parent
of the American Craft Museum (founded in 1956 and recently renamed the Museum of Arts & Design) which has
since become an independent and thriving institution.
But the general public probably knows ACC best for its craft shows
which are held in various cities around the United States throughout the year. These shows
are juried, the artists chosen by a peer-review process that assures an unusually high
quality of original work. There's an astounding variety of media in which these
craftspeople work, including clay, glass, textiles, metal, wood, paper and whatever other
raw materials capture their imaginations.
The selection is large, with some 300 exhibitors, most of whom are
present in their booths. Thus the visitor has the unusual opportunity to engage in
dialogue with the artists.
Hugh McKay is one of many exhibitors working with glass, but where most
glass artists today are interested in glass blowing, McKay (who calls his studio Heretic
Glass) sculpts glass with molds, using the classic lost-wax process. The resulting texture
is generally denser than the blown glass work seen elsewhere, but it retains the
luminosity and translucence of the material. Some of McKay's pieces look biomorphic;
others are more architectural. This is museum quality work and, indeed, the Los Angeles
County Museum of Art and the Detroit Institute of Art, among others, have McKay works in
their permanent collections. (Prices are correspondingly steep.)
Ceramicist Anne Goldman's stoneware pieces grow larger and more elegant
with each passing year. Starting with wheel-thrown vessels, she then carves, sculpts, and
pierces the surfaces which take on a variety of textures that give the look of wood or
stone or some wondrous undersea shell.
Kevin Loughran creates what he calls "house jewelry,"
individually crafted items like door bells, dimmer switches, switch plates, and sconces,
using brass and copper which he etches with a variety of patterns, from the geometric to
the floral, often with an Asian influence. Patrick Meyer also creates all kinds of
household accessories, from cheese knives to shaving brushes to handsome decorative
hardware. His material is pewter, but safe, contemporary pewter, made of tin and silver
(without the lead that used to give pewter its dusky finish) and his forms are inspired
both by primitive sculpture and modern art. Handsome, affordable gifts.
Kathleen Otley creates stunning wall hangings using peeled and stained
willow branches bound with various colors of wool and brass rings. Inspired by tribal art,
these are unique pieces that typify the creativity and individuality found at the ACC
shows. Steve Smeed's porcelain horns are joyfully decorative and they can be played as
well.
Barbara Woods creates hand-painted silk and ceramic lighting -- lamps,
sculptures, and wall pieces. The silk is mounted on styrene, the material used as the body
of lamp shades. From the elegantly simple insect sconces to an entire
bottom-of-the-seascape, her work glows with subtle colors and fine detailing.
The quality of work in the ACC shows is such that there is sheer
pleasure simply in viewing the works on display. That they are all for sale is an added
bonus for the casual shopper or the serious collector. Prices range from $20 to nosebleed
levels. Beware for your budget, though--it's hard to leave without a new acquisition to
take home.
August 8, 2003 - Arthur Lazere
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Barbara Woods, Violet Eyed Moth |