LONDON.- Sims Reed Gallery is presenting an exhibition of fine art prints and original works on paper by the internationally renowned American artist Dale Chihuly. Due to the restrictions resulting from COVID-19, the gallery is offering a 3-D, virtual walk through of this show, available
here.
While celebrated for his exquisite and pioneering glass installations, drawing has always been integral to Chihulys artistic practice. They became an increasingly important means of communicating his ideas to his team after losing the sight of his left eye in 1976. These works evolved from charcoal and graphite studies into wilder colourful pieces, that according to the artist remain a crucial part of his creative pro- cess, without which the glass works would not have progressed in the way or at the speed with which they have.
He describes the exchange of energy between the two as a flow of ideas, commenting that drawing is a fluid process, like the blowing of glass.
This exhibition, which is comprised of twenty-nine original prints and ten original works on paper, seeks to reveal the elision of these two disciplines. Some of the prints a medium the artist has been exploring for almost 30 years draw on his sculptural series, such as Baskets, Niijima Floats and Venetians, for inspiration, while others are purely imaginative.
As Chihuly has said, sometimes the drawings would be about the glass; sometimes theyd just be drawings, a way to release the energy, or a way for my mind and body to be creative while the glassblowing was going on.
The featured prints range from woodcuts, hand-coloured screenprints and lithographs, as well as many embellishments incorporated into the production of each. Says the artist, I want people to be overwhelmed with light and colour in some way theyve never experienced. These qualities, along with his two other guiding principles, asymmetry and irregularity, can be witnessed in the displayed works. For example, Echo
Floats (2018), is formed of two swirling daffodil-yellow and iridescent violet spheres with speckled centres set against a spring green background. A work of exceptional beauty, it also mirrors the grand, spherical form and blended-color surfaces that is found in the artists acclaimed Niijima Float series, which he commenced in 1991.
Also included in the show are ten original works. The earliest of these, Venetian Drawing (1990), captures the immediacy of his astonishing visual invention, with upswept thrusts of black charcoal suggestive of birds or flames, while evoking the exuberant forms achieved in the sculptural series from which its title is derived.
In other original works presented, Chihulys dedication to experimentation is highlighted. His delight in stretching the limits of whatever media he works with is particularly evident in the Ikebana drawings (1998 and 2009), in which the artist employs an innovative technique of burning directly into the paper.
Max Reed, Gallery Director, says: We are thrilled to be showing for the first time these prints and works on paper by Dale Chihuly, who over five decades has explored new and old techniques, pushing the boundaries of Contemporary Art to create works that transform the everyday experience. While he is globally and justly renowned for his installations and glass artwork, it is arguably on paper that these ideas initially emerge and are subsequently revisited, resulting in a creative collision that gives rise to astonishing works of beauty and depth.
Dale Chihuly is an American artist noted for revolutionising the studio glass movement and elevating perceptions of the glass medium. Known for ambitious architectural installations in cities, museums, and gardens around the world, Chihuly utilizes a variety of media to realise his creative vision, in- cluding glass, paint, charcoal, neon, ice, and Polyvitro. Chihulys work is included in more than 200 museum collections worldwide, including Metropolitan Museum of Art, Smithsonian American Art Museum and Corning Museum of Glass. Major exhibitions include Chihuly Over Venice (1995-96), Chihuly in the Light of Jerusalem (1999), de Young Museum in San Francisco (2008), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (2011), Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond (2012), Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Montreal, Canada (2013), Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Canada (2016), Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas (2017), Groninger Museum, Groningen, the Neth- erlands (2018), and Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, London, U.K (2019). Chihuly Garden and Glass, a long-term exhibition located at the Seattle Center, opened in 2012.