This is a pair of freeblown glass sculptural forms, cut, polished and mounted on glass bases.
Without Peter Layton’s extraordinary dedication to glass, the studio glass landscape would not be what it is today, and not only in the UK. Originally trained as a ceramicist when “England had no market for studio glass, and craft galleries focused solely on ceramics, jewellery and macramé,” Peter encountered glass art in the USA in the late 1960s. He fell in love with this medium straight away. Since then, promoting glass as an art form has been his life's mission, and one he has succeeded at with global recognition. Peter is the author of several key books about glass art. In 1976 he founded London Glassblowing which is one of Europe’s foremost glass art galleries and one of the longest running hot glass studios, bringing together some of the best talents of this fascinating craft under the same roof.
Read the full interviewPhoto: ©Sylvain Deleu
This is a pair of freeblown glass sculptural forms, cut, polished and mounted on glass bases.
Photo: ©Sylvain Deleu
Here are two freeblown sculptural forms, heavily cased in clear glass with internal threading recalling typical Burano lace.
Photo: ©Sylvain Deleu
These discs are hot sculpted solid glass sculptural forms, cased in clear glass over internal threading and mounted on glass bases.
Photo: ©Sylvain Deleu
This is a group of sculptural pieces from the Blossom series. They are freeblown glass, inspired by a visit to the collection at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam.