Discover The Rich History Of Glass At The New Orleans Museum Of Art
Glassmaking dates to Mesopotamia circa 2500 BCE, but it was the Romans, approximately 2,000 years later, who pioneered glassblowing, allowing for the production of intricate decorative items, while, in 1903, French chemist Édouard Bénédictus developed tempered glass, which is some 10 times stronger and plays a critical role in design today.
All this and more are explored in “Sand, Ash, Heat: Glass at the New Orleans Museum of Art,” an exhibition of hundreds of items drawn from the NOMA’s permanent collection, examining how the material is connected to scientific discovery, foodways, cultural exchange, and artistic innovation across time and cultures, from Ram’s Head, from the 18th Dynasty of Egypt (1550–1292 BCE), to 2017’s The Hinged View by Icelandic-Danish artist Olafur Eliasson. “Lenses, architecture, phone screens, even wine bottles and the vessels used to toast—all are part of our shared human history in glass,” Mel Buchanan, NOMA’s RosaMary curator of decorative arts and design, says. Local talent is celebrated as well, with items by former Tulane University students and professors, including Gene Koss, who founded the school’s hot shop in 1976.





read more
DesignWire
10 Questions With… Chris Gustin
Ceramic artist Chris Gustin dives into the dynamic exploration of movement and nature in his largescale works and his show at the Donzella gallery.
DesignWire
A Career In Color: Explore Olga De Amaral’s Retrospective In Miami
Explore a different perspective on color with textile artist’s Olga De Amaral’s retrospective at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami.