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Warren Carther

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Known for
  
Glass artist

Education
  
California College of the Arts, University of Manitoba, BFA.

Warren Carther, BFA, RCA, is a Glass Artist based in Winnipeg, Manitoba. His educational background includes study in glass blowing at the Naples Mill School of Arts and Crafts, New York (1974), glass art at the California College of the Arts, as a student of Marvin Lipofsky. During his early career (1979-1986), Carther’s love of Architecture inspired him to create sculptural works that were not for architecture but were in homage to architecture. His international works are many, often featured in airports, corporate and government buildings. Carther is best known for his large-scale glass sculpture and innovative approach, including his creative use of dichromic glass, acid-etching and abrasive glass carving in his works. Most notable works include Chronos Trilogy, Hong Kong (1998) and Euphony, Anchorage International Airport, Alaska (2004). Carther’s work has been published in many books and magazines, among them; International Glass Art by R. Yelle and Colours of Architecture by A. Moore. His awards include; The Royal Architectural Institute of Canada’s the Allied Arts Medal, Award of Excellence, the Allied Arts Medal (2007), and The Ontario Association of Architects Allied Arts Award, for innovative collaboration with an architect for the Canadian Embassy, Tokyo (1992).

Contents

Biography

Warren Carther’s interest in glass as an art form began with blown glass. In 1977, while a student at the California College of the Arts, in Oakland California, Carther began to envision creating enormous walls of sculpted glass. He soon realized that the architectonic scale he was seeking was not possible at the end of a blowpipe, therefore in order to achieve the scale he desired, he would have to push glass in new ways, beyond what had been considered in the past. Thus began a long process of experimentation and discovery in technique and structure, which led to the work he currently creates. It is Carther’s aesthetic vision, combined with an understanding and emphasis on the structural qualities of glass, which has enabled him to create sculptural works of unique form and immense scale. His interest in working large, sculpturally and within the architectural environment has led him to develop techniques which produce work that defies categorization and at times, blurs the boundaries between art and architecture.

Statement

Carther believes that art is an essential component of architecture and that the lives of human beings benefit significantly from art that they encounter in their daily lives. His understanding of this drives his desire to work in the architectural environment.

Carther’s ambiguous, multi-layered themes serve to assist the architectural environment in defining a sense of place. All of his work addresses, in some way, the idea of the interdependence of human beings and nature. They represent our innate desire to comprehend the world around us; to look beyond the rational and the visible; to reveal some essential truth about the world and our place in it.

Innovation

In 1972, when he first became intrigued with the notion of working in glass, it was not what he had seen that excited him but what it was what he had not seen. At a time when all other art forms were changing, glass, it seemed to him, was not. He wondered why so few artists were exploring a material, which was capable of so much. After becoming aware of the, still very young, Studio Glass Movement in the USA (Studio glass), he studied glass blowing in New York (1974) and California (1975–1977), Carther returned to Canada to explore the material on his own.** He wanted to work sculpturally in glass on a very large scale and within architectural environments. Not wanting to accept the structural and aesthetic limitations of stained glass, he began experimenting with techniques such as acid etching and abrasive blast carving. In 1981, Carther came to the realization that he did not need lead at all, that if he worked with thicker ¾ inch plate glass, he could carve deeply into glass with abrasive blast and not compromise the structural capabilities of the glass, allowing him to work at almost any scale. He also began to fire glass enamel onto the plate for colour. This method of working became his primary technique. **

North America

Canada

  • 2010, Winnipeg International Airport, Winnipeg, Canada
  • Carved glass sculpture, stacked glass technique, 12.2 ft. X 7.2 ft. X 3.4 ft.

  • 2007, Blue Cross Headquarters, Winnipeg, Canada
  • Carved Glass Wall, 15 Ft. X 9 Ft.

  • 2006, Re-fit Health Centre, Winnipeg, Canada
  • Two Carved Glass Walls: 22Ft. X 6Ft. X 1.5Ft.

  • 1999, Ottawa International Airport, Ottawa, Canada
  • Carved Glass Sculpture, 14 ft. X 12Ft. X 6Ft.

  • 1994, Investors Group - One Canada Centre, Winnipeg, Canada
  • Carved Glass Sculpture consisting of two towers of glass, each 35 Ft. high X12 Ft.

  • 1986, Winnipeg Law Courts Building, Winnipeg, Canada
  • 8 courtroom entries - 16 Carved glass panels

    United States

  • 2008, Sacred Heart Medical Center, Eugene, OR, USA
  • Carved Glass Panels, multiple panels, Total length: 52 ft. X 8 ft.

  • 2004, Anchorage International Airport, Anchorage, Alaska
  • Carved Glass Sculpture consisting of nine towers of glass. Total length: 135 Ft. Height: 27 Ft.

  • 2003, Orange County Convention Center, Orlando, Florida
  • Carved glass Wall, 25 Ft. X 15 Ft.

  • 2002, AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals, US Corporate Headquarters, Wilmington, Delaware
  • Carved Glass Wall, 27 Ft. X 15 Ft.

    Europe

    England

  • 2015, The Canadian Embassy, London, UK
  • Carved sculptural glass panels, 12.5 Ft. X 6 Ft.

    France

  • 2000, Charles de Gaulle Airport, Paris, France
  • Reflective Carved Glass Wall: 100 Ft. X 6Ft.

    Asia

    Hong Kong

  • 1999, Swire Properties Ltd. Lincoln House, Hong Kong
  • Three Carved Glass Sculptures located within one office tower: 40 ft. X12Ft. - 100Ft. X 27Ft. - 27Ft. X16Ft.

    Japan

  • 1991, Canadian Embassy, Tokyo, Japan
  • Carved, sculptural glass wall, 25Ft. X 22Ft.

    Awards and distinctions

  • Royal Architectural Institute of Canada (RAIC), 2007
  • Award of Excellence - Allied Arts Medal
  • Royal Canadian Academy of Arts (RCA), 2002
  • Elected to the Academy

  • The Saiyde Bronfman Award for Excellence in the Crafts, 2002, 1997, 1992, 1990, 1989
  • Five time nominee for Canada’s most prestigious craft award.

  • Ontario Association of Architects Allied Arts Award, 1992
  • Received award for innovative collaboration with an architect, for the glass sculpture in the Canadian Embassy in Tokyo

  • The American Craft Award, 1991
  • Received American Craft Award in architectural glass; Received American Craft Merit Award in sculpture

    Books

  • Colours of Architecture, by Andrew Moor, Published by Mitchell Beazley, London, UK
  • A Celebration of Glass, by Kenneth vonRoenn Jr., Butler Books, USA
  • International Glass Art by Richard Wilfred Yelle, Schiffer Publishing, USA
  • The Art of Glass by Stephen Knapp, Rockport Press, USA
  • Designing With Glass (An International Survey) by Carol Soucek King, PBC International, Distributed by Rizzoli (U.S.) Hearst Corp (Overseas)
  • Contemporary Stained Glass, by J. Russ and L. Lynne, Doubleday, Canada
  • Creative Designs in Furniture, Kraus Sikes Inc., USA
  • Lectures

    Carther is often invited to speak about his work and public art. He has spoken in Canada, the USA and Australia. In June 2007, Carther spoke on transformations in the relationship between public art and glass in the late 20th and early 21st centuries when he presented a lecture to the Glass Art Society (GAS) in Pittsburgh, PA.

    References

    Warren Carther Wikipedia