Organization Details

Description & History

Founded in 1977 by artists Richard Yelle and Erik Erikson as the New York Experimental Glass Workshop, UrbanGlass is the first and largest artist-access glass center in the United States.

Previously, those interested in working in glass could only do so at art schools, in factories or by building their own studios.

When UrbanGlass opened its doors, glass as an art medium became available for the first time to a wide range of artists at an affordable price.

Today, the facility of UrbanGlass serves as the primary studio of over 350 artists each year. It is located in the Strand Theater in the BAM Cultural District of Fort Greene, Brooklyn, NY.

In addition to the artist-access studio, UrbanGlass offers a comprehensive education program of classes, workshops and intensives at every skill level - from novice to professional - in a wide variety of glassworking techniques, including glassblowing, hot casting, kiln casting, lampworking, fusing, slumping, neon, mosaics, stained glass and cold working.

Over 900 students a year come from around the world to study and work with a faculty that includes world renowned artists and designers and acknowledged glass masters.

Other UrbanGlass programs include GLASS: The UrbanGlass Art Quarterly, the pre-eminent English language publication covering the contemporary glass scene; The Bead Project?, an entrepreneurial program for economically disadvantaged women that has become a model for similar programs worldwide; the Robert Lehman Gallery, which focuses primarily on exhibitions of glass art by emerging artists; the Atelier program, which acts as a resource to artists, architects and design professionals wishing to incorporate glass into their work; the Visiting Artist Fellowships, which brings emerging and established artists into the UrbanGlass community and provides the resources and materials for them to create a new body of work; and Urban Invites, an in-kind grant program of materials and services to fabricate glass components for non-commercial exhibition of work by an established artist.

Through the depth and variety of its programs, UrbanGlass continues to be a distinctive and influential presence in the glass field and the most important East Coast center and resource for artists wishing to experiment with glass.

Contact Persons
Becki Kapelusznik, Assistant Director
(718) 625-3685
becki@urbanglass.org
Address
Google marker
647 Fulton Street
Brooklyn, NY 11215
(718) 625-3685
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