This stained-glass window framed in wood is inspired by Casa Vicens, Gaudí’s first house design in Barcelona. This piece depicts the polychrome exploration behind this magnificent architecture and the transition from Art Nouveau to modernism.
Anna Santolaria masters the delicate and fragile art of glass-stained window conservation and contemporary creations among scaffoldings. She opened Vitralls Can Pinyonaire, her own atelier in Girona, in 2014. She had just returned from England where she graduated with an MA in Stained Glass Conservation and Heritage Management from the University of York. Anna has since been dedicated not only to conserving endangered architectural glass pieces in Spain and abroad, but also to advocacy of this craft’s preservation. Working mainly for ecclesiastical and municipal institutions, Anna has collaborated with stained-glass conservators in England, Germany and Sweden. Far from the rigour of conservation, she also creates and collaborates in contemporary stained-glass design projects where she finds the freedom to experiment with the versatility of refracted light – which is what she has always admired in architecture.
Read the full interviewPhoto: ©Miquel Silveria
This stained-glass window framed in wood is inspired by Casa Vicens, Gaudí’s first house design in Barcelona. This piece depicts the polychrome exploration behind this magnificent architecture and the transition from Art Nouveau to modernism.
Photo: ©Miquel Silveria
Trichrome, made in stained plated glass, was inspired by Gaudí’s restoration designs for Palma de Mallorcas’ gothic cathedral, which includes the human figure.
Photo: ©Miquel Silveria
Anna Santolaria’s Sonorous Landscape, created with stained glass and lead, is one her first contemporary window designs.
Photo: ©Miquel Silveria
This window model is inspired by Gaudí’s façade oval designs for Casa Batlló in Paseo de Gracia in Barcelona. The piece is made with a blown glass disc and framed in a lead and wood structure.
Photo: ©Miquel Silveria
This window model is inspired by Gaudí’s façade oval designs for Casa Batlló in Paseo de Gracia in Barcelona. The piece is made with a blown glass disc and framed in a lead and wood structure.