died in the wool ______

To have no set purpose in one's life is the harlotry of the will -Stephen Mackenna-

Monday, May 30, 2005

Dale Chihuly ad Kew Gardens

sheratonwalkerB

Dale Chihuly's great glass blowing structures with, according to his biography ' ' highly baroque, writhing elements' are being displayed at the Kew Royal Gardens (click here to view the BBC's picture log of them.

Dale, who grew up outside of Seattle in Tacoma, has an interesting educational history; He studied at University of Wisconsin (madison, I'm assuming) in the nations first glass blowing sculpture program. He then went to RISD's ceramics program where he in turn created its glass department. He is responsible for establishing blown glass as an art form in the US.

We have his glass 'sunburst' (clever use of orange glass on the inside) in the lobby ofthe MIA in Minneapolis. The picture at the top up there is actually not from the Kew site, but from the Sheraton Walker Hill hotel in Seoul(here's a larger image. I stayed at this hotel, and I was giddy, beyond there amazing spa area, wine bar, two storied lobby with a harpist and flutist, to see this great piece hanging in nestled among the huge plants in the lobby. It really is true that these pieces look great with plants (hence so many pieces in conservatories and gardens, etc.) I just wanted to put it in here.

The minimalist in me doesn't want to like these, but these are a total exception (besides the one at the Walker-Hill is all shades of white; the one at Kew isn't as 'pure') Some of the pieces at Kew, frankly, do detract from the garden itself, as some of the passer by's commented, so they aren't a total success. Chihuly does better in abstraction; his plant personification stuff just falls flat into theme parkish-ness.

2 Comments:

At 4:59 PM, Blogger Raf M said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

 
At 5:02 PM, Blogger Raf M said...

To confound the viability of placing sculptures side by side with nature, people do have mixed reactions to his works (its no help that he is suing some former hands who are "imitating" the way he, simply put, "imitates" the sea). Others say that when you watch
him and his workers in progress,
you get (mind, allegedly!) the
impression that he doesnt have
that much direct control over
the outcome.
And yet, and yet... the beauty
of the works he started and is
pursuing now can make you wonder, which is imitating which: art? nature? See more of Chihuly and
Tagliapietra in this art glass
for-beginners article!

 

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