Blue Elongated Sphere
Blue Elongated Sphere
Blue Elongated Sphere
Blue Elongated Sphere

Blue Elongated Sphere

Art Glass Vessel (ID: A81581)
Designed by Eric Bladholm
$480
$480 $480 /
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Blown vessel and glass stopper with attached bronze branch. Part of the artist's Fissure series of vessels inspired by industrial landscapes. Intense, internal colors are partially exposed by scoring the more muted surface color while the glass is molten. After the vessel has cooled, a stopper is created out of a metallic oxide glass and a custom cast bronze branch is attached. Bronze is hot wax sealed. Every piece is unique; pattern and size will vary slightly.
  • Not watertight
  • Signed by the artist
  • Materials: Glass, Bronze
  • Shipping Charges are calculated for standard delivery to a single address within the contiguous USA and based on original prices, before discounts.
  • You may return or exchange any item within 14 days of receiving it (except for final sale items, ornament gift boxes, and custom orders). Learn More.
Eric Bladholm

Eric Bladholm

"My work incorporates dream-like imagery into the thick layers of a glass canvas."

The colors and textures of nature are the departure points for many of Bladholm's innovative explorations with blown glass. Summers in Door County, Wisconsin, as a child, and extensive travels in Europe have influenced his work.

Eric Bladholm's blown glass designs involve multiple sections, usually a base piece and a custom-fitted sculptural lid. At their smallest, these pieces resemble their functional relatives, the perfume bottle. At their wildest, mold-blown glass is utilized to create abstract/industrial shapes that are presented in an organic cast metal base.

Bladholm got his start in glass and art early. At age 11, his older sister taught him how to make stained and leaded glass, which he pursued until he discovered the art of glassblowing in college. After completing his BFA in fine art and glass at California College of Arts and Crafts, he spent a season in Europe working with several renowned glass masters. He then returned to Chicago to meet the challenges of building a studio of his own.

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