Narcissus Quagliata E book Signing + Forest Garden Museum Exhibit


E book Signing at Bullseye Los Angeles and Judson Studios

On Saturday, October 25, throughout every week of particular occasions celebrating his exhibition at Forest Garden Museum, Narcissus Quagliata had a ebook signing at Bullseye Glass Los Angeles and Judson Studios. With lots of his far-flung college students gathered and a taco truck offering dinner, it was a festive event. Narcissus signed books for over 2 hours, and rumor has it he took care to personalize each. One other stylish day for the Maestro!

Backstory to the Exhibition

By the Nineteen Eighties, Narcissus Quagliata had established himself as a rock star within the artwork glass world. His Bay Space studio overflowed with high-dollar commissions, particularly portraits for the wealthy and well-known. Improvement moguls, movie administrators, previous cash and new: everybody needed to be immortalized by the younger maestro. Quagliata was using excessive. And but it wasn’t the glamor of that season that caught with him most. It was the distinction he skilled passing between the world of his patrons and that of the unhoused individuals dwelling simply outdoors his studio partitions.

Certainly one of these neighbors impacted Quagliata deeply. The person confirmed up dwelling in a automobile. He interacted with others, saved rhythms, ran errands. However his automobile quickly disappeared. His phrases and rhythms and routines did too. Earlier than lengthy, when Quagliata stopped by with sandwiches, the person would solely converse in grunts by means of a jungle of hair whereas ripping—endlessly, incessantly ripping—skinny shreds from any paper he might discover. Nobody knew learn how to assist. Haunted, Quagliata started a 15’ x 9’ stained glass portrait of the person. The piece took six years to finish. To at the present time, Quagliata considers it to be his best work in stained glass.

Narcissus Quagliata: Archetypes and Visions in Gentle and Glass

Now much more famend for his modern work in glass fusing than for his many accomplishments in stained glass, Quagliata’s daring new exhibition at Forest Garden Museum is a retrospective on private and historic ranges. It juxtaposes Quagliata’s kilnformed artworks with Medieval, Renaissance, and Trendy stained glass masterpieces. The latter of those is Quagliata’s personal, a portrait of the buddy point out above, created over a six-year interval within the 80s. By contrasting fused glass artworks with previous exemplars of the medium he spent the second half of his profession laboring to transcend, Quagliata’s exhibit lays naked his legacy as an innovator in glass fusing. The most important piece of this new work—The Bench—is roughly 11’ x 5’ and was fabricated in partnership with Bullseye Studio in Portland, Oregon.

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