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"Crrracck!" "Crrraash!" The usual sound you'll hear when a glass breaks or cracks. Broken glasses may happen by choice or by accident. It depends upon the
Re-purposed broken glass sculpture
Trying to do normal life can be tough some days especially when focusing upon one task impacts on the rest of my alters. The last few days I have been attempting to complete a specific piece of wor…
Description While the nine artists featured in WONDER create strikingly different works, they are connected by their interest in creating large-scale installations from unexpected materials. Index cards, marbles, strips of wood—all objects so commonplace and ordinary we often overlook them—were assembled, massed, and juxtaposed to utterly transform spaces and engage us in the most surprising ways. The works are expressions of process, labor, and materials that are grounded in our everyday world, but that combine to produce awe-inspiring results. WONDER what they created? Jennifer Angus covered gallery walls in spiraling, geometric designs reminiscent of wallpaper or textiles—but made using specimens of different species of shimmering, brightly-colored insects. Chakaia Booker spliced and wove hundreds of discarded rubber tires into an enormous, complex labyrinth as Gabriel Dawe hung thousands of strands of cotton embroidery thread to create what appear to be waves of color and light sweeping from floor to ceiling. Patrick Dougherty wove monumental structures from countless tree saplings while Tara Donovan constructed looming spires from hundreds of thousands of individually-stacked index cards. Janet Echelman explored volumetric form without solid mass, overtaking the museum's famed Grand Salon with a suspended, hand-woven net surging across its hundred foot length. Using hundreds of thousands of pieces of reclaimed, old-growth cedar, John Grade built an intricate structure based on plaster casts taken of a massive, old-grown hemlock tree in the Cascade Mountains. Maya Lin's deluge of green marbles flowed across the floor and up walls, recalling the tides of the Chesapeake Bay, while 23,000 LEDs—programmed by Leo Villareal to display a code manipulated into endless variations—flashed above the Grand Staircase. “The experience of ‘wonder’ is deeply intertwined with how we experience art, and why these nine artists create the works they do. They are each masters of constructing works that startle us, overwhelm us and invite us to marvel—to wonder—at their creation. These elements matter in the context of this museum, devoted to the skilled working of materials in extraordinary ways.” —Nicholas R. Bell, The Fleur and Charles Bresler Senior Curator of American Craft and Decorative Art Visiting Information Renwick Gallery November 13, 2015 — July 10, 2016 Open Daily, 10:00 a.m.–5:30 p.m Free Admission
Gellage is a series by Czech photographer Michal Macku named after an intricate technique he developed. The term "gellage"–essentially a portmanteau
How much do you know about tempered glass and what it does? What makes it stand apart? How strong is it? Asneers to all that and more are right here!
Click to enlarge With New Year's Eve upcoming, a large number of people will celebrate by popping open a bottle of champagne. The bubbles in your glass may seem simple enough, but there's actually a wealth of interesting chemistry behind them...