Bio and images
Resident Fellow Brent Marshall came to the Creative Glass
Center of America with the "idea of change." For nearly a
year, the American artist has been living in England and the
experience led to reflection on both form and process in his
work. Distance intensified a need he already felt "to see and
work differently."
Architecture and building run through Marshall's oeuvre. The
relief panels which are the focus of his work at CGCA only
obliquely bring to mind the Constructivists, the Russian
artists who were influenced by Cubism and by their
recognition of the growing importance of the machine.
Nevertheless, he acknowledges the group as an influence on
his work. His earlier sculpture, combining glass with a
industrial materials like textured steel and wire mesh has
more direct links to the Russian artists. In addition,
silhouetted forms of silos, bridges, and utilitarian
buildings reflect the Midwestern Ohio location where they
were made. Centered, symmetrical and concentrated-- more
classical and temple-like than Constructivist work; they
share a similar recognition of the ambiguity of space and a
deconstruction of the illusion of solidity.
"I am one of five kids and I was the only one that was really
interested in sitting and just drawing," he says. "It was the
act of doing that kept my attention for hours and hours and
hours building imaginary cities. Once I was done, that was
it: I wasn't interested in playing with it as a city."
About six months ago Marshall set up a cold glass studio in
West Yorkshire, UK. His time in England has reinforced a
transition which began before Marshall and his wife left
Cleveland. "This all started with the renovation of our
kitchen," he remembers. Sliding glass door permitted
passers-by full view of the kitchen, an uncomfortable
fish-bowl sort of feeling. "I said, 'Okay, I'm going to make
some tiles.' We put in wooden doors," he says, "and I made
glass tiles for the sidelights." These simple glass tiles
evolved into the nature imagery of his current work.
The shelves of his workspace at CGCA, are stacked with neat
rows of near identical elements: soft green rectangles with
angled leaves, simple blue undulations, pale yellow ginkgo
leaves. His cold casting studio in England is only 10' x 12.'
Here, he elaborates certain casts, especially a series of
goddess-like faces, with hot applications in which he
sprinkles in color, gold, or trails hot glass into the
graphite mold.
"Blowing was what got me hooked [on glass], but my
temperament is more geared toward mold-making," Marshall
notes. "There's something enjoyable about holding the work in
your hand rather than feeling it through newspaper." Each
element is hot-cast in graphite--or occasionally
plaster--molds constructed mostly with hand tools. He will
assemble the individual elements into panels after his
residency ends. Marshall works hard. Three days a week, he
casts as much as 450 pounds of glass in one night with the
help of fellow CGCA residents. "I don't think any of them
will ever cast glass again!" he jokes. In exchange for their
help, Marshall assists the others, who are all blowing glass.
The finished elements will be fashioned into large panels
which function as room dividers or windows. "This will fit
into the architectural space, but it's not based on
architecture," Marshall says, referring to his earlier
sculpture. The panels will reveal different personalities
through the day. When light passes through, the effect
resembles stained glass; however, when lit from only one
side, as, for example, indoors at night, relief elements will
be highlighted. To enhance this aspect, Marshall selectively
polishes some areas to a high gloss, emphasizing the curve of
a cheek or forehead and, simultaneously, opening a view into
the depths of the glass. Other areas will have a softer,
matte texture.
As for imagery, "England is the land of gardens," Marshall
says. "I've always been connected with the out-of-doors
because my father is a naturalist." He's developed an
ingenious group of Jungendstil-like designs which incorporate
virtually identical components in different configurations.
The components are modular in silhouette, but all are subtly
unique. Oftentimes, the artist says, he translates readings
into panel designs. For example, the description of Solomon's
temple in the Bible led to an image of a lily in a design he
calls Solomon's Garden; though, he says, "It's not
built to be philosophical. I like to look at beautiful
things. The inspiration is a personal thing for me."
Serene classical female faces, some wreathed with leaves, are
the key elements of several designs. Variations in color give
each countenance a particular flavor. In some, lines of green
cut through translucent golds and pinks, shadowing the image
when it is seen from certain points of view. In others blues,
which will become violet in the sunlight, predominate.
At least for now, Marshall has abandoned the severe
architecture of his earlier sculpture for a softer,
nature-related imagery. Nevertheless, he is still making
buildings, more seriously than ever before, or more
specifically, "portals," both windows and doors: spaces which
welcome us into an ever-changing celebration of the natural
world.
Created by
admin
Last modified
02:06 PM 03/04/2008