August 2015
Holsten Galleries newsletter
Greetings. This month I want to share some very special new work by Stephen Rolfe Powell and an interview I did with Stephen recently. Stephen has long been one of my favorite American glass artists, both as an artist and as a person. In addition, I am featuring new works by Lino Tagliapietra, Nancy Callan, Hiroshi Yamano, John Kiley and a wonderful new small scale piece from the Man Adorned series by William Morris that has just come onto the secondary market. I hope you enjoy this edition of Holsten Galleries News and, as always, I welcome your comments and questions. Enjoy the rest of your summer! |
"Art is the most intense mode of individualism that the world has known." – Oscar Wilde |
K: You’ve been blowing glass now for a long time. Please remind me of how you got started in glass. S: When I was 28 years old I started to work on an MFA degree at Louisiana State University with a specialty in ceramics but I was also very drawn to the physicality of glassblowing and to the interaction of glass with light. I visited New Orleans frequently because they had a glass program at Tulane. I considered switching my emphasis from ceramics to glass but ended up completing my MFA in ceramics. Then in 1983 I got my first teaching job at Centre College in Danville, KY. I was mainly teaching ceramics but I knew right away that I wanted to develop a glass program there. I taught both glass and ceramics for many years at Centre before switching completely to glass. |
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K: Tell me about your new series. I love the large murini. These pieces are very painterly. S: Exactly, I was interested in making pieces which are more painterly. This work is more about color than pattern. I’ve always had a strong interest in the color field painters like Davis, Rothko and Noland. And more recently Sean Scully. K: Prior to this new body of work is there a series which you particularly like or enjoyed making? S: I loved making the recent Echo series. Those large, thick bowl forms allowed me to explore the refractory quality of glass more than ever before.
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K: Speaking of Lino Tagliapietra, I know that you and Lino Tagliapietra have been close for a long time and that he has come to Centre to work with you numerous times. I was lucky enough to be present when Lino Tagliapietra was awarded an honorary doctorate there, along with Judge Sandra Day O’Connor. What would you say has been Lino Tagliapietra’s greatest influence in your art? S: Lino Tagliapietra has influenced almost everything about the way I make glass. However, I would say that his most important influence has been in how I live. Lino Tagliapietra’s curiosity and appreciation of life has been a huge influence in my own life. Take food, for example. I have learned so much about enjoying good food and cooking from Lino Tagliapietra! K: If you were to choose another field of work what might that be? S: The first thing that comes to mind is that I would love to be a great chef!
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Featured Works:
Dinosaur |
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Klimt Top |
Double Ledge |
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Scene of Japan #142
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Man Adorned Figure |
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Thank you for taking time to read this month’s edition of Holsten Galleries News and take care! Kenn Holsten |