Flo Perkins
Flo Perkins (born 1951) is an American glass artist currently working and residing in the Pojoaque Valley north of Santa Fe, New Mexico. She received her Bachelor of Arts from the Philadelphia College of Art (1974),[1] Master of Arts from the University of California at Los Angeles (1981),[1] and she studied under renowned Italian master glass blower Lino Tagliapietra.[2] Her work can be found in several museum collections including the Corning Museum of Glass,[1] the Los Angeles County Museum of Art,[3] the Albuquerque Museum and the Racine Art Museum as well as numerous public and private collections.
Career
[edit]In the 1970s Perkins was one of a small group of female artisan glass blowers. In the 1980s Perkins built her own glass studio in Pojoaque, New Mexico where she worked on learning Venetian glassblowing techniques. She further refined her glass making technique while studying with the Murano glass master Lino Tagliapietra[4]
While living in New Mexico in the 1980s and 1990s she studied botanical forms including cacti, flower buds and bouquets and began incorporating those forms into her work. In the 1990s she began incorporating bronze, steel bars and iron into her glass work to create larger works including lattices, wreaths, swags and bouquets.[5]
By the early 21st century Perkins had mastered her glassblowing technique and become known for her creation of brightly colored botanical sculptures created using Italian techniques including murrina, reticello and granulare. She also built her fourth hot shop on her estate located 20 miles north of Santa Fe, New Mexico.[4]
Perkin's work has been displayed at Habatat Galleries in Pontiac, Michigan,[6] Addison Arts, Santa Fe, New Mexico,[7] Traver Sutton Gallery in Seattle, Washington,[8] The Elliot Brown Gallery in Seattle, Washington, Imago Galleries in Palm Desert, California, Cline Lewallen Galleries in Santa Fe, New Mexico,[9] Tagliapietra and Dante Marioni at Galleria Marina Barovier in Venice, Italy, and at The Corning Museum of Glass, in Corning, New York[10]
In addition to her glass work, Perkins has taught at the Pilchuck Glass School, California State University at San Jose, Penland School, and the University of California in San Diego.[11] Additionally, she has taught workshops for students at the GlassRoots hot shop in Newark, New Jersey.[12]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c "Mazzo Sporgente (Leaning Bouquet)". Corning Museum of Glass.
- ^ Wildlife Art Magazine May/June 2005
- ^ "My Third Arid Dream". LACMA.
- ^ a b Ohuma, Keiko (Fall 2010 – Winter 2011). "Dangerous Bounty Flo's seductive glass art often includes spikes". Trend Art+Design+Architecture: 98–99.
- ^ Lucartha., Kohler (2003). Women working in glass. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Pub. ISBN 0764318071. OCLC 51931104.
- ^ Miro, Marsha (Fall 1997). "Flo Perkins". Urban Glass: 61.
- ^ Billingsley, Eric (Fall 2005). "Flo Perkins "New Work"". The Urban Glass Art Quarterly. 68: 60.
- ^ Chambers, Karen (Winter 1987). "Flo Perkins". New York Glass. 28: 23.
- ^ Anderson, Kathie (Spring 1997). "Flo Perkins". AmericanStyle. 3: 21.
- ^ Bernstein, Ruby (1991). "Four on The Floor: The Steuben Competition Winners". The Glass Arts Society (Journal).
- ^ "Flo Perkins". The Glass Art Society Journal: 27th Annual Conference Global Glass Tucson, Arizona: 60. 1997.
- ^ "Artists' News". Art Alliance for Contemporary Glass (Newsletter). 4: 10. Spring 2010.
External links
[edit]
- 1951 births
- Living people
- 20th-century American women artists
- American contemporary artists
- Artists from Santa Fe, New Mexico
- American glass artists
- American women glass artists
- University of California, Los Angeles alumni
- University of the Arts (Philadelphia) alumni
- 21st-century American women
- Glass art stubs