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Glass
installations

Commended design for the Stevens Competition for
Architectural Glass, 2008.
Materials: pâte de verre
captured within hot glass
Dimensions: 150 cm X 100 cm.
© RexFeatures
Cryptical is an installation,
made for the Glass Echoes exhibition in the Crypt Gallery, St
Pancras Church. 2007. The title has several resonances: it means ‘of
the crypt’; it means ‘hidden or secret’; and it means ‘enigmatic’
– all of which describe my piece. This derives from the unseen
fragility of the construction of my own body: the brittleness of my
bones and a spinal injury with an inscrutable medical name.
Materials: pâte de verre with
dichroic elements
Dimensions: 80 cm X 84 cm
approx.
Ampersand
River
is a mobile
triptych for CLA’s reception area and it expresses
the agency’s role in enabling the spread of creativity and
learning.
The piece is a river of glass, made up of roundels and lenses meandering
across three frames (representing the authors,
illustrators and publishers on whose behalf CLA acts).
Its outline is that of the River Fleet which runs parallel to the
piece some yards away beneath the building.
Materials:
optical lenses and
kiln-formed pieces; mixed techniques (silver stain, engraving,
sandblasting, enamelling, fusing and mirror silvering); oak frames
Dimensions:
2.5 x 1.15 metres
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This
is entitled ‘Comma Separated Values’ and shows an outsize
punctuation mark made of layers of optical lenses.
Removed
from context, it could be a comma, an apostrophe or a quotation
mark. This ambiguity is reflective of the way in which language,
meaning and vision alter according to perspective. In all
performance, point of view determines our interpretation of what
we see and hear.
A
storyteller
accompanies this piece and draws out the themes of ways of seeing
by demonstrating myths and fairytales with alternative endings or
ambiguous interpretations.
300+
opththalmic lenses fused at 720°C with some additional clear
lenses affixed. Wooden frame oil-gilded with aluminium leaf. 910
mm high x 730
mm wide,
with base.
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This
piece is based around the circle as a metaphor for the cycle of
life. It celebrates exuberance and asymmetry of pattern within a
constraining circular form. The patterns are drawn from primitive
motifs from all parts of the world as well as from
photomicrographs of living organisms. Within this arrangement is
the human form; at times precariously wedged, at others in harmony
with the rest. They are bound by patterns that have existed before
they were born.
Lenses
decorated with degussa enamels, lustres, engraving, inclusions and
metallising, with additional ruby glass roundels from MRJ
Furnaces. Frame
made of maple.
650
mm x 980 mm.
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