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  Encouraging and promoting the collecting and enjoyment   
of the glass of Frederick Carder   


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Gazelle Gazette

The "Gazelle Gazette" is a Carder Steuben Club Newsletter that is initially delivered as an email and is maintained by Alan Shovers. This section provides an archive of the Gazelle Gazette Newsletter postings. If you would like to submit a Newsletter posting or have your email address added to Alan's address list, please email it to .


Carder Steuben Goblet - 3381




It's Time to Renew!

Posting Number 3108   Date: 01/09/19     Return to Posting List

Its a New Year and its time to say that we still have a few people who havent renewed for this year. Memberships are important as they allow us to keep the website active, keep those ever interesting Gazettes in your inbox, and of course the opportunity to visit CMOG and attend our symposium. If you are unsure of your status, please feel free to email me at any time (). You can easily renew by clicking on the link at the bottom of every Gazette.

UPCOMING EXHIBITION AT THE NEWARK MUSEUM UNEXPECTED COLOR

UNEXPECTED COLOR

A Journey Through Glass

Opens April 28, 2019

The Walter Scott Lenox Pavilion and The Vivienne and Stanley H. Katz Gallery

Unexpected Color: A Journey Through Glass features the Thomas N. Armstrong III Collection of Steuben Glass, recently donated to the Newark Museum. The exhibition offers a window into the science, craft, and art of this lesser-known, colorful glass that was made and used by two visionaries. Frederick Carder, co-founder and designer of Steuben Glass Works, and Thomas N. Armstrong III, prominent museum director, loved color, organic forms, and art. Discover how Carder experimented with glassblowing techniques and chemical formulas to create vibrant jewel-toned colors in glass. Follow that glass through multiple settings as Armstrong collected and used the vibrant bowls, vases, and candlesticks in his homes, in a variety of traditional and contemporary settings.

With more than 130 works highlighting Frederick Carders experimentation and designs from , the exhibition showcases his colorful glass and its functional and artistic use in the Armstrong homes. Photographs, audio interviews, and images from design catalogs and formula notebooks provide context about the Steuben chemistry and glassblowing techniques required to produce these shimmering creations. Ancient Roman, Chinese, and Art Nouveau glass inspired Carder and examples can be found throughout the Newark Museum galleries, providing an historic and global context for the Steuben glass. Images from the Armstrong homes reveal how the colorful glass was, and can be, integrated with traditional and contemporary architecture, art and interiors. Unexpected Color offers a journey of discovery about how art and glass can be found everywhere and in the everyday details of our homes as well as in the sparkling, vibrant Steuben glass in the exhibition.

The exhibition is organized by the Newark Museum and is curated by Stephen Milne, Guest Curator and Exhibition Design Advisor, and Amy Simon Hopwood, Associate Curator of Decorative Arts at the Newark Museum.


Images:
Click to view image one: Unexpected Color.jpg

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