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Amethyst Aerie

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Amethyst Aerie

Artist Jon Kuhn (American, b. 1949)
Date1991
DimensionsH: 20 1/2 in.; W: 6 1/2 in.; D: 7 in.
MediumCut, polished, and laminated glass
ClassificationGlass
Credit LineGift of the Estate of Ruth D. Vinney
Object number
2011.13
Not on View
Label TextInspired by his interests in Eastern mysticism and architecture, as well as personal meditative experiences, Kuhn’s large crystalline sculpture resembles a pillar of sparkling light. To achieve this effect, Kuhn does not shape his glass forms while hot, but instead cuts, polishes, and fuses cold glass from the inside out. Comprised of thousands of tiny shards of amethyst glass, Amethyst Aerie takes in surrounding light, reflecting and refracting it back into space, causing the piece to change color when viewed from different angles in different environments. By taking in, altering, and releasing the light that falls upon it, the Aerie transforms both itself and the environment in which it is placed. The artist says of his work that, “the pieces, in a sense, become architectural models for an inner world, possibly a better world.”
Forget Me Not
Jon Kuhn
1993
Wild Arum with Seed Pods
Paul Joseph Stankard
1982
Plate Glass Vase #26
Sidney R. Hutter
1981
Equivocal Equinox
Michael Pavlik
1983
Cloistered Cube Botanical
Paul Joseph Stankard
1989
Asymmetrical Sculptural Form (Design #558) in Amethyst
Wayne Husted
designed: 1955; made: 1955-1956
White Rockers
Jon Carsman
1981
The Kuehn Children
Heinrich Kühn
1907
Black-Amethyst Sinumbra Lamp
New England Glass Company
1830-1835

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