Bio and images
It’s tempting if facetious to
describe Summer 2005 Resident Fellow of the Creative Glass Center of America,
Emrys Berkower as the exemplar of “good taste” in glass. His glass is certainly
lovely to look at and it looks even better with food on it. Berkower
successfully combines his appreciation of great food and with his love of glass
in performance works. At the Corning Museum of Glass, Berkower’s 2300
Degrees: Cooking with Hot Glass Italian Style (2004) produced a
multi-course meal in which food was cooked on hot glass. He has also cooked on
hot glass and served the food on the identical designs which have been
annealed, delighting and dazzling viewers with a metonymic cycle of complete
functionality.
At
thirty-something, Berkower has accomplished more than many artists do in a
lifetime—in terms of actual technical mastery and in terms of recognition.
Venetian techniques involving inclusions of lacy cane and murrini, patterned
colored glass, are among the most demanding skills in any art form. Berkower
made a thorough study of them and now he’s in a position to be a bit blasé. “Reticello
is simple,” he says and he is prepared to discuss the distinction between latticino
(an often-misunderstood reference to milk, simply indicating the white color of
canes) and mezza fillagrana, he believes a more correct term for a fine
network of filaments. On a more subtle level of appreciation, Berkower says
that the manipulation of canes produces a “randomness that can only be achieved
out of order.” His skills are highly marketable. Gump’s has carried his work
and he’s worked as a production artist making glass designs by the great
modernist Eva Zeisel for the Orange Chicken.
He’s
taught; he’s demonstrated; he’s traveled; and his work and skills are in demand.
Nevertheless, in his application to the fellowship program Berkower indicated
that he feels he is at a crossroads in his career and self-definition as an
artist. He wrote, “At this critical point in my career [the three month
fellowship] will provide me with an opportunity to pare down [my] ideas into a
more cohesive and refined personal vision and, thus, reenter the market a more
independent and further developed artist.” In his studio at CGCA, he simply
says, “I’ve been spread very thin doing production and working for someone
else. This is not what I want to do.”
He
describes his interest in Italian techniques as “fairly cynical. I just think
people in glass — Artists with a capital A—get too wrapped up in tradition and
technique. There are people like Beth Lipman who have used that skill to make
exceptional and content-driven work, [but] some people get so involved that ten
years later they discover that they’ve forgotten how to be an artist and just
learned how to be craftsmen. Now I have built up a vocabulary [of technique]
and that’s the language I speak through. Now I need to use what I know to step
somewhere else.
“I’m
interested in the decorative object. Where does it lead? Is it a symbol of
status? Do people buy it because they really love it or because their friend
bought a Chihuly?” Berkower questions the role beauty will plays in the things
he makes, “I want them to be at one stage beautiful and all those things the
object is supposed to be but I also want them to be challenging, maybe dissonant,
jarring.”
To
this end, at Wheaton Village,
Berkower integrated almost torturously complex glass techniques with the
iconography of sports and science and with non-glass materials. He conceived of
some of these rather elaborate structures as “models,” perhaps not for larger
works but representing a larger vision. In one piece based on golf it appears
that the elite nature of the game and its location in a highly manicured but
seemingly natural environment (golf course) may be Berkower’s ironic commentary
on the impact of social values in the natural context. The really, really
miniature golf course—about the size of a big checker board—combines an
architectural model and a perspective-based landscape with a large “golf ball,”
represented in the form of a flat glass disk, in the foreground. The fact that
this picture only works from a limited cone of viewpoints suggests a kind of
metonymic exclusivity. The turf, though, is real. “I was going to use
artificial material but I want to use living moss now,” Berkower explains.
“Distant” buildings and landscape features are represented in glass.
A
lecture at Corning by
American-born, Amsterdam-based Richard Meitner made a strong impression on him.
Berkower summarizes: “Art is just a series of experiments that are trying to
help you figure out your surroundings and the world.” He recalls a friend who
said, “It’s not about what it looks like; it’s about what it does.” He adds,
“That’s a mantra to me.”
Another
complex piece with the working title “Art Cart” is a tiny installation on a
flat plywood surface balanced on pretty glass wheels. “This is carrying my
art,” Berkower explains. The wheels resemble poker chips, but for Berkower the
honeycomb pattern of murrini is more complex, suggesting nature, science, and
industry. On the field, which may become
an undulating topographical structure, a painting of round bubbly
cloud/mountains suggests a landscape and skiers with the implication of
transcending mountains, as well as playfulness. The cart is “about painting
being on a higher echelon than craft, but it is carried by this obsessive
interest in craft,” represented by the fragile glass wheels which actually
broke during the construction of the piece.
Berkower
simply laughed off this accident as a normal part of the process. “I don’t want
to lose the sense of being innovative, experimental and questioning. I’ve had
the best time in the last few weeks. For me it’s about integrity.”