Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Nature Inspired Soap Dish



This soap dish could very well be the exact opposite of the one below with the dichroic glass! This is a light and subtle nature inspired piece. The focal point is the leaf, constructed from green frits. it is surrounded by purple hues on iridized glass. This soap dish would look great in any bathroom or kitchen because it can pretty much go with any color or scheme.

Happy New Year 2008/2009!

I would like to say Happy New Year! We are counting down the hours now here in PA until 2009. I am sure it will be another great year and I am looking forward to so much-too many things to even list. I will be completing much more work in the new year, including sculptures and new designs across the board. I am entering some art shows starting in February so will be working hard through January to prepare. I will keep the photos and postings rolling.

Thanks for checking in and looking at what I have to offer. I appreciate any feedback you have and if you are interested in purchasing anything, please e-mail me at adriaoglass@ovdiyenko.com. I will be happy to discuss pricing and shipping, and answer any questions you might have.

Happy New Year!!

Monday, December 29, 2008

Are You Going To Let An Ugly Bar of Soap Cover This Up?


Just imagine the surprise when an unsuspecting guest lifts the soap off of this soap dish! This is dichroic glass at its best, a real show stopper. Warning: it may turn you into an obsessive compulsive hand washer. But who could blame you for wanting to ogle this baby as often as possible?

Super Thin and Modern Dark Blue Swirled Dish




This dish is around 4 x 4 in measurement and is just light as a feather, so dainty. It really captures the spirit of the fragility and function of glass and minimalist design. The bottom is coated in silver mica for a metallic luster. The top design is dark blue and clear swirled glass. Simple and elegant.

Medium Votive Holder in Purples and Blues



Way back when in September I posted a violet votive holder, which is a relative and predecessor to this votive holder. This one is bigger, medium sized, and textured with frits instead of smooth. It is more on the blue side too, as opposed to being mostly purple like its counterpart. The violet votive from the past may have been the inspiration, but this piece is all its own.

Votive Holder-Red With Gold Mica



These pictures speak for themselves! This votive holder is designed with red and orange glass on the inside and is coated with gold-bronze mica on the outside to give that crackled metallic look you see. It really does shine and sparkle beautifully!

SOLD-Bright Reds, Oranges, and Yellows


This bowl is so simple, and yet so eye catching, colorful and interesting! It stands out with bold color on the top, where I used cherry red, red opal, orange opal, tangerine, light orange and marigold frits. The bottom shines in gold-bronze-ish mica. The shape is just barely slumped. Very unique!

Sunday, December 28, 2008

3 Saucy Sushi Dishes




Here are three petite sushi condiment dishes for the roll fanatic. Perfect for any dipping sauce (like my favorite-Wasabi) or even small little nibbles (like Wasabi covered peas, another favorite of mine) to go with your meal. I suppose if you were feeling imaginative in your cooking, or if you don't like sushi, these could be used to beautifully display other condiments like olives, tapenade, oil and herb dipping sauces for bread, horseradish sauce, mustards...as you can tell I like to cook, AND the list is endless.

I am currently working on some sets to go with these three little dishes. I will make sets of four in each design and sell them in sets rather than individually. For now I just wanted to show them off. I hope you like them! Look for sets in future postings!

Friday, December 26, 2008

Large Dark Blue Swirl Bowl-Matte

Don't let the picture fool you-this baby is pretty big! It measures 7 x 7 inches. What is so interesting about this bowl is the matte finish on the inside, which is bordered by a thin strip of shiny glass right around the edges. Truly amazing. The outside is Amazon Green glass, which is bolder than the pastel green in some of the other dark blue swirled pieces you have seen on my blog. Still nature inspired, but more midsummer as opposed to early spring!

Again, you can see the raindrop pattern I added to the design to give it that watery feeling. This bowl has it all-texture, color, and style.

SOLD-Dark Blue Swirled Bowl and Tile Set




These pieces were sold as a set recently. The small bowl rests on the tile to make a lovely nature inspired display of glass. The bottom side of both pieces is a light pastel green that just peeks through the swirled dark blue glass above. As detail, I added some "raindrops" to the pattern. These pieces are serene, like water and rain and wet leaves.

Sky Blue Prototype Small Bowl




This is another prototype bowl that is a winner for our sculpture. This bowl is made with sky blue frit instead of the deep aqua and is no less beautiful for it. We will be using different blues for the sculpture, hence the differences in the prototypes. This piece is also made with copper leaf and frits, and has a silver mica back. It is slightly smaller than the other prototype, but was slumped over the same mold so holds the same shape.

SOLD-Prototype Small Bowl



I call this a prototype bowl because it was designed for a sculpture that Chris and I are working on. Our new sculpture is inspired by water, and will combine steel and glass in a cascading pattern. We still haven't decided if it will be free standing or if it will be a wall mount sculpture. But I digress. I made several 4 x 4 glass prototypes of the "water" we will be using for the sculpture and here is one of the winners. For the sculpture I will not be using 4 x 4 pieces most likely so I slumped this prototype into a small 4 x 4 bowl.

The back of this bowl is silver mica. The inner layers are made of copper leaf, deep aqua and blue orchid iridized frit, and it was fired at a lower temperature than I would normally use for a full fuse to capture a bit of copper oxidization. Overall the effect is amazing. From the sides of this bowl you can see layers of copper and frit, magnified by the clear glass I used.

The best part about this bowl is that it is an inspiration for a much larger sculpture. It is part of the art process that just happened to look so awesome on its own. You will see this design again!

Sorry all prospective buyers, this bowl is sold. Fortunately the sky blue version is still available. Please see my next post.

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Swirled and Textured Plate



This plate was so fun to make! It started with a wire melt, which is the oblong swirled piece of glass you see in the middle. I fused the wire melt onto dark purple glass and added frits all along the outside. I used Red Opal, Orange Opal, and Marigold Opal frits all in coarse to mosaic sizes. I fired it at a low temperature (this is relative) so it was more than a tack fuse, but less than a full fuse (the low 1400s). By firing at a lower temperature, I maintained the textures of the wire melt and also the frits. And the texture of this piece is so much the charm! I slumped it into a sushi style plate.

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Alfonse Maria Mucha, 1860-1939



Czechoslovakian Alphonse Mucha was THE Art Nouveau artist. In fact, Art Nouveau was termed "Mucha Style" for a time before it was termed "Art Nouveau". Most of Mucha's Art Nouveau style work was produced commercially, and in his life, Mucha sought to distance himself from his commercial art. He believed commercial art was a betrayal of fine art and he hated to be considered a "sell out" essentially. He believed that all art conveys the spiritual and comes from within, but much to his chagrin, the fame in his life came from his commercial art, leading to great frustration for the poor man.

I admire the Art Nouveau style and you can see it in some of my work. What I am drawn to is not the images of Neoclassical women, or the pastel colors, because neither of those inspire me much, but it is the way nature is portrayed in this style that truly appeals to me. In each photo I have posted, take note of the trees, the leaves, the flow of nature that runs through each piece. Again, this liquidity and swirls of color can be translated to glass. Glass is a liquid medium (some would say a highly viscous liquid, or better yet, an amorphous solid) and that is what draws me to it. It is unlike any other substance on this planet. When I see nature represented with such flow, it reminds me of the beauty of glass, and better yet, what I can do with it!

So while Mucha didn't fully appreciate Mucha, he was a pioneer in art who continues to inspire artists to this day.

Saturday, November 1, 2008

Steve Tobin: Metal Sculptor and Inspiration


Every once in a while I post another artist's work that inspires me. This is a sculpture made from cast bronze letters that were then welded together. Lucky for me I live only 20 minutes away from Steve Tobin's workshop so I can drive by and ogle his sculptures as often as I like! The other day when we stopped by, he was out in the yard welding something that is sure to be ingenious like everything else he does. If you live near the Quakertown area, be sure to drive by Tobin's, you won't be sorry. Check out his site, which has more info about him and also more photos of his excellent work, at http://www.stevetobin.com/. When you check it out you will see that Tobin has used glass in his work in the past, and used it very well. Glass and metal are natural companions and I admire those that see the compatibility like Chris and I do. You will be seeing a lot of sculpture coming from our studio in the future as we blend the two mediums together.

For a Wedding



These two pieces, a votive holder and resting tile, were commissioned as a wedding gift. The groom I am told is interested in martial arts and meditation, cool colors. The bride likes iridized and dichroic glass, and is also an accomplished artist, art critic, and jewelry maker. I blended the two styles together as well as I could to make this gorgeous set that is a combination of cool colors in a very peaceful and watery design, with an iridized backing that shimmers and shines. I hope they both enjoy these pieces for years and years to come! Congratulations to the bride and groom!

Saturday, October 11, 2008

Now Our Entries Revealed




I feel liberated now that I can share the pictures of the artwork that Chris and I entered in the Dear Fleisher event! I am sure both pieces are happy in their new homes and I hope that the new owners enjoy them completely and for a lifetime. Please disregard the terrible quality of the photos. We were rushed on the submission and we took photos quickly, indoors where it is dimmer than the natural lighting I normally use.

My piece was inspired by a winter full moon with a halo.
When hexagonal ice crystals high in cirrus clouds scatter moonlight to our eyes in a certain way, a halo sometimes appears, much like rain distorts the light of the sun and sometimes creates rainbows
. This glass moon is bright white, against a gray sky, surrounded by a haze of color. The lamination is clear iridized glass, which helps to reflect and transmit the rainbow of colors surrounding the moon. This is no ordinary moon, but is a moon before a snow storm. A moon in a mysteriously dark sky, colorful and radiant despite being slightly subdued by clouds, ice crystals, and other reflected light.

Chris's piece is from the vantage point of the Riverwalk in Philadelphia, looking out over the Schulykill River from the Art Museum area toward the Amtrak building. He is very interested in digital representing actual, and used a dot pattern, an amplitude modulation, to represent the setting. Chris says it represents Man's quest to become a dot. I am not sure that he is kidding.

Dear Fleisher Event a Huge Success!




The "Dear Fleisher" 4 x 6 pieces of art event was a huge success. Chris and I attended the artist preview on October 4th at 10 am and we were blown away by the sheer amount of talent we saw! As soon as we walked through the doors into the gallery, all we saw was color, color, and more color. Overall it was a stunning sight, then when we got close enough to see all the individual pieces it was even more amazing. Artists from every genre under the sun submitted work. At the actual event on October 5th at 4 pm, we personally bought 2 acrylic Hummingbird paintings by Hunter Clarke (www.hunterartist.com) who is represented in LaPelle Gallery in Philadelphia, two of Lucartha Kohler's cast glass leaves (for those of you who do not know, Lucartha taught me how to not only cast glass, but also fuse and slump it too-I owe her a great debt of gratitude. She was the only other glass artist who submitted to the gallery besides me. Her website is www.lucarthakohler.com), and also a very beautiful oil painting by Frederic Kaplan that we fell in love with (www.kaplanpicturemaker.com). The event raised over $55,000. for the school! The photos above are pulled from the artists' websites and are not the particular pieces we bought, but it will give you a feel for each artist's work.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

A New Collection!



I am introducing a new line of glass artwork. You can buy one piece or many-they will be sold seperately. Right now I have three smaller pieces, one already in votive shape and two others waiting to be slumped into votives. I will be making assorted shapes including plates and bowls in the same design. As always, each piece is handmade by me and is unique, will be signed, and assigned a number all its own, even if the design is similar. I have decided to do several pieces with the same feeling because some people want more than one piece to go together. Everyone I have talked to loves this design so I decided to go forward with this line. Plus, what better color to gift at Christmas than a lovely green??? Two votives are already sold at this point, but there will be more in the making! E-mail me for details if you would like a full set or if you have a particular shape/size in mind for a slump.

SOLD-Wire Melt Display-Just in Time for Fall!





It is fall again and I couldn't be happier! I love fall so of course it inspires my work this time of year. I just finished up a circular display that is a beautiful swirl of fall color. I photographed it leaning against some other objects because I don't have a stand for it yet but I just couldn't resist sharing it. I hope you enjoy this taste of autumn from my studio!

Thursday, September 18, 2008

SOLD-Rainbow Bowl #1





I love rainbows and working in rainbow colors. I know some people consider it to be "gay" but I have no ulterior motive. I just adore rainbow colors together. When you look at these photos, you see why it works so well and why it is a color scheme I keep coming back to. So far I have made quite a few peices in all different shapes and sizes in rainbow hues. If you are like me and you can't live without color in your life, you will enjoy these particular pieces. These are just two examples from my rainbow collection. One is a small bowl that would be perfect for small candles or little things you might lose, like keys. The other could be used as a candle holder or a small bowl. The crackling on the outside is caused by slumping iridized glass, and it looks amazing. They are certainly a far stretch from the classic take on the rainbow (there are no unicorns or leprichauns, sorry), with some very interesting and modern design and composition. ENJOY!

SOLD-Rainbow #2-Bowl-$70