Amber Cowan is an artist and educator living in Philadelphia.
She is a faculty member of the glass department of Tyler School of Art, where she received her MFA in 2011 in Glass/Ceramics.
Cowan’s sculptural glasswork is based around the use of recycled, upcycled, and second-life American pressed glass.
She uses the process of flameworking, hot-sculpting and glassblowing to create large-scale sculptures that overwhelm the viewer with ornate abstraction and viral accrual.
With an instinctive nature towards horror vacui (filling of the entire surface of a space or an artwork with detail), her pieces reference memory, domesticity and the loss of an industry through the re-use of common items from the aesthetic dustbin of American design.
The primary material used for her work is glass cullet sourced from scrap yards supplied by now defunct pressed glass factories as well as flea-markets, antique-stores and donations of broken antiques from households across the country.
Cowan uses these found pieces to create remarkable one-of-a-kind objects that reference the rise and fall of US glassware manufacturing, while simultaneously offering a new narrative.
More of Amber Cohen‘s amazing glasswork can be found at https://ambercowan.com/.
I absolutely love this art work!!
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It reminds me of milk glass I used to see as a kid. But a LOT more intricate. Thank you for sharing!
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Amazing.
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Thank you!!
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Amazing and excellent artist. Loved her work. Too good
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I am always jealous of such talent! Thank you for sharing your thoughts!
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You are always welcome and I agree totally with you.
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Unbelievable! The work involved and the attention to detail are incredible.
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I so agree! Kinda makes me dizzy!
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I agree! 😵
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This is awesome. I cannot imagine how it is possible to re-shape old glass pieces into these fantastic creations.
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I don’t either. And they are so busy, so intricate. Placement is everything!
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