ASHEVILLE, NC.- A Hand in Studio Craft: Harvey K. Littleton as Peer and Pioneer highlights recent gifts to the
Asheville Art Museums Collection and loans from the family of glass artist Harvey K. Littleton. This exhibition places Harvey and Bess Littletons collection into the context of their lives, as they moved around the United States, connected with other artists, and developed their own work. This exhibitionorganized by the Asheville Art Museum and curated by Whitney Richardson, associate curatorwill be on view in the Judith S. Moore Gallery at the Museum from January 19 through June 27, 2022.
Harvey K. Littleton (Corning, NY 19222013 Spruce Pine, NC) founded the Studio Glass Movement in the United States in 1962 when, as a teacher, he instituted a glass art program at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, the first of its kind in the United States. He taught the next generation of glass artistswho taught the nextand his influence can still be seen today. But before he dedicated himself to the medium of glass, Littleton studied industrial design, ceramics, and metalwork at the University of Michigan and the Cranbrook Academy of Art in the late 1930s and early 1940s. He met his wife Bess Tamura Littleton, a painting student, at the University of Michigan. Over the course of their careers, Harvey and Bess collected artwork by their fellow artists and amassed an impressive collection from the early days of the Studio Glass Movement and the height of the American mid-century Studio Pottery Movement.
This exhibition offers the viewer an exciting opportunity to see some of Harvey K. Littletons early work in ceramic and metaldirectly from his familys collectionbefore he began making art in glass, says Whitney Richardson, associate curator. Best known for his glassworks, those will be on display alongside the work of his students and his peers making clear the influence he had on them and the Studio Glass Movement.