and Robert Wilson of Downtown, showed his statement - making Hudson Chandelier with seventeen
hand blown glass globes.
Not exact matches
It comes with a
hand -
blown 28 - ounce
globe decanter and two matching 12 - ounce lowball
glasses.
Key works include Andrew Erdos's Texture of a Ghost (2011), a 6 x 8 foot room featuring
hand -
blown glass sculptures and a video installation; Josiah McElheny's Landscape Model for Total Reflective Abstraction (I)(2004); Luke Jerram's E. coli (2010), which explores the tension between scientific objectivity and cultural perceptions of viruses, diseases, and bacteria; twelve snow
globes by Walter Martin and Paloma Muñoz from the Travelers series; three stained
glass light boxes by Judith Schaechter; and a recent body of work by Czech Republic - based artist Karen LaMonte that highlights the role of the kimono in Japanese culture.
Also exhibited is the 1989 sculpture «The Angel», a work made of 125
hand -
blown glass globes created in Venice over a period of one year.
These pieces are shown in dialogue with his seminal work The Angel, created three decades later in 1989 — just eight years before the artist's death — which consists of 125
hand -
blown Venetian
glass globes arranged on the floor to form a stylised figure derived from the Japanese kanji character for «man».
It promises 250
hand -
blown globes that emit light and contain a handmade insect, which react as people approach, emitting sound as they collide with the
glass.