Clear Amber Tabletop Chandelier
View Similar Items
Dale ChihulyClear Amber Tabletop Chandelier2001
2001
About the Item
- Creator:Dale Chihuly (1941, American)
- Creation Year:2001
- Dimensions:Height: 59 in (149.86 cm)Width: 30 in (76.2 cm)Depth: 30 in (76.2 cm)
- Medium:
- Period:
- Condition:
- Gallery Location:Miami, FL
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU154128032022
Dale Chihuly
With his sculptural works that fuse naturalistic forms with vibrant colors, Dale Chihuly has established himself as one of the world’s preeminent contemporary makers of art glass. The Tacoma, Washington, native’s experimental techniques — manifest in large-scale glass sculptures, installations and environmental artworks alongside smaller table-top pieces — combine fine art, design, architecture and craft.
Chihuly’s inspired creative energy has brought glass blowing to a place at the forefront of the arts in the United States. His prolific body of work is coupled with a dedication to artistic instruction, education and community. Trained in interior design at the University of Washington, he pursued graduate work with Harvey Littleton, who built the first academic art glass program in the U.S. at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. After further studies at the Rhode Island School of Design, Chihuly was awarded a 1968 Fulbright Fellowship to study glass blowing at the Venini glass factory on the island of Murano in Venice, where he was first introduced to group collaboration in glass making. Not only has Chihuly been committed to his own improvement as an artist, but he has also devoted much of his career to sharing his knowledge. He returned to RISD as an instructor, and after working there for more than a decade and he cofounded the Pilchuck Glass School in Washington State in 1971. An automobile accident in 1976 left Chihuly blind in one eye; a subsequent injury while bodysurfing weakened one shoulder, leaving him reliant on assistant glassblowers to execute his designs.
Chihuly’s skills and technical innovations have allowed him to make pieces in an astonishing array of patterns, textures and hues — yet his work can be recognized immediately. He has created several notable extended series of artworks. These include his “Seaforms,” which evoke shells, starfish and other marine animals; “Blankets,” which are composed of cylindrical units in patterns suggested by Native American textiles; and, most famously, his grand chandeliers made up of scores of curling, curving, pepper-shaped elements. Whether large or small, as you will see on 1stDibs, the works of Dale Chihuly blend practical flair and bravura artistry. They are a highlight of any contemporary art and design collection.
- Vase OrmeauxBy René LaliqueLocated in Miami, FLRene Lalique "Vase Ormeaux" White blown molded glass with patina and high color 7,5 x 7,5 in Appears in the 1928 and 1932 catalogs. Catalog Raisonne #984Category
1920s Art Deco More Art
MaterialsBlown Glass
- Jai Alai Suite Ed 87 of 300By Jesús Rafael SotoLocated in Miami, FL“Jai Alai Suite” 1969 Perspex, nylon thread, and steel Ed 87 of 300 19 x 6 x 6 inCategory
1960s Sculptures
MaterialsSteel
- Vega Mir (from album Bach)By Victor VasarelyLocated in Miami, FLVictor Vasarely (9 April 1906 – 15 March 1997), was a Hungarian-French artist, who is widely accepted as a grandfather and leader of the Op art movement. In 1928, he enrolled at Sán...Category
1970s Op Art Abstract Sculptures
MaterialsMetal
- Antique Plique a Jour BeakerLocated in Miami, FLRichly colored plique a jour beaker Silver gilt wire frames and cabled rim Beautiful ornaments and patterns. Unmarked 2 x 1,75 inCategory
Early 20th Century Art Deco More Art
MaterialsSilver
- “Turtle-Back” desk lampBy Louis Comfort TiffanyLocated in Miami, FLLouis Comfort Tiffany “Turtle-Back” desk lamp, 1905 ca. Patinated bronze and marbled glass. 14 in high Shade marked "Tiffany Studios", base stamped "Tiffany Studios, New York, 71452".Category
Early 1900s Art Deco More Art
MaterialsBronze
- La soprano calva (The bald Soprano)By Alfredo SosabravoLocated in Miami, FLAlfredo Sosabravo “La soprano calva” 1998 Murano Glass 18 x 8 x 8½ in Provenance: Private Collection, Miami Literature: Alejandro G. Alonso, Sosabravo: Las Tres Dimensiones. Illust...Category
1990s Contemporary Figurative Sculptures
MaterialsGlass
- "Blue Abstraction" Blown-glass, Steel, Abstract, SculptureLocated in Detroit, MISALE ONE WEEK ONLY "Blue Abstraction" is a blown-glass creation encased in steel. The captured organic lift of its shape belies the weight of its structure. The copper colored steel is a beautiful contrast to the deep cerulean blue of the glass and adds to the feel of sky and/or water seeming to give the piece a timeless flow. Albert Young has been operating an independent glass studio/school since 1983 and has been a pivotal member of the Detroit areas glass community. He received his BFA in ceramics from The Center For Creative in Studies in 1982 and his MFA in sculpture from Wayne State University in 1988 as well as studies in Taiwan, Murano, Italy and Canada. Albert currently owns and operates Michigan Hot Glass Workshop, Michigan’s oldest independent glass blowing school. He is also on the faculty at The College for Creative Studies where he teaches all levels of glass blowing and creative thinking. He is best known for his sculpture using innovative casting techniques and the combination of steel and glass. The College for Creative Studies (formerly Center for Creative Studies) faculty and graduates include Richard Jerzy, Harry Bertoia, Doug Chaing (currently director of Lucas Film), Stephen Dinehart (game maker, writer, designer connected with The David Lynch Foundation), Tyree Guyton (international artist), Herb Babcock, Jerome Feretti, Kevin Siembieda (writer, designer and publisher of role-playing games), Renee Radell, Philip Pearlstein, Charles McGee (nationally recognized African American sculptor of animal and dancing spirits), Philip Pearlstein (2000 Honorary Doctorate, Modern Realism style), John Louis Krieger (American Modern), William Girard (American Modern), Charles Culver...Category
Late 20th Century Abstract Geometric Abstract Sculptures
MaterialsSteel
$6,650 Sale Price30% Off - Reflections on Water - tall, colourful, hand-blown glass, outdoor sculptureBy Susan RankinLocated in Bloomfield, ONSusan Rankin has captured the luminous colour of water—from pale blue and turquoise to ocean blue in her latest series of garden columns. These hand-blown glass outdoor sculptures ar...Category
2010s Contemporary Abstract Sculptures
MaterialsSteel
- Champagne Afternoon - tall, colourful, hand-blown glass, outdoor sculptureBy Susan RankinLocated in Bloomfield, ONLike flowers in a garden, Susan Rankin’s beautiful glass columns appear to sway in the breeze. An avid gardener, Rankin has created a series of outdoor sculptures inspired by the for...Category
2010s Contemporary Abstract Sculptures
MaterialsSteel
- "Woodlands Palette Tapestry", Wall Mounted Sculpture Composed of Metal and GlassBy Jenny Pohlman and Sabrina KnowlesLocated in St. Louis, MOPohlman and Knowles began their collaboration in 1992. They use a variety of materials in their rich assemblages, including hot-sculpted glass, various metal works, found objects and beads, achieving a fine sense of formal balance. Three notable research field trips...Category
2010s Contemporary Sculptures
MaterialsMetal, Steel
- "Woodlands Palette Tapestry", Wall Mounted Sculpture Composed of Metal and GlassBy Jenny Pohlman and Sabrina KnowlesLocated in St. Louis, MOPohlman and Knowles began their collaboration in 1992. They use a variety of materials in their rich assemblages, including hot-sculpted glass, various metal works, found objects and...Category
2010s Contemporary Sculptures
MaterialsMetal, Steel
- "Threaded Infusion Block in Gold, Purple and Red", Blown and Kiln Cast GlassBy Jamie HarrisLocated in St. Louis, MOJamie Harris straddles the disciplines of painting and glass blowing approaching his work, “more from a painterly perspective than as a traditional glassblower.” His work is primarily about something simple: ”loud splashes of color, capturing the innate way glass transmits, reflects, and absorbs color.” The viewer often witnesses this sensitivity through a number of techniques and forms that Harris has mastered: “from the strictness of my blown work to the organic looseness of my fused panels,” he uses color systems and theory to develop his forms. Yet the other critical layer to Harris’s work is expressive and visceral. The colors are intended to imprint an immediate emotion on the viewer’s experience of his objects as a very direct experience of color. Harris also straddles divergent historical epoch’s: “I merge a classic Venetian sensibility with a modernist approach.” blending the look of Murano glass with Twentieth Century modernism as typified by the Bauhaus, Harris hybridizes the functionality of vessel and the aesthetics of sculpture. Jamie Harris also teaches at UrbanGlass, in Brooklyn, NY. He has studied at the most prestigious glass studios in America: The Pilchuck Glass School, the Rhode Island School of Design, the Penland School off Crafts, the Haystack School, and the Corning Museum of Glass and Tiffany & Co. Selected Collections Sergey Brin, Palo Alto, California Mobile Museum of Art, Mobile, Alabama Museum of American Glass, Millville, New Jersey Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz, Brooklyn, NY "Threaded Infusion Block in Gold, Purple and Red", Blown and Kiln Cast GlassCategory
2010s Contemporary Sculptures
MaterialsStainless Steel, Steel