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Glass Artists
Gallery Featured Artist:
Ed Pennebaker
On a mountaintop
outside Osage, Arkansas lives Ed Pennebaker, one of Glass Artists
Gallery’s multi-talented artists. Even if you’ve never seen his
gifted glasswork, the home he has built for himself is clearly the
work of a creative. Simple-yet-artistic accents like his garden
gate, woven from vines and branches and adorned with whimsical
bobbles, make his home environment more like an enchanted land.
A modest man, Pennebaker isn’t likely to mention that his
glasswork was featured in the 1993 "White House Collection of
American Crafts." The collection has since traveled to the
Smithsonian Institution and other museums nationwide.
Pennebaker was also named one of Early American Homes magazine's
"Best Traditional Craftsmen" for his work with traditional tools
and techniques of Early America. Pennebaker has retained this
honor for the past 11 years.
As a child, Pennebaker loved to draw. He expanded his skills to
include airbrush designs and oil and paper creations. Photography
followed and his artistic talents knew no boundary.
Pennebaker earned his Masters Degree in Art at Emporia State
University in Kansas majoring in printmaking with an emphasis on
silkscreen design. It wasn't until he was involved with an
"Artist-in-the-Schools" program that Pennebaker learned to work
with glass.
"I began making glass with the high school art instructor in
Liberal, Kansas in 1980," Pennebaker recalls. "It began as a past
time since he only ran the furnace during winter weekends. But it
got me interested and I chanced upon a job in Ohio at a historic
village that I visited while on a motorcycle trip in 1983."
Pennebaker works year-round in his studio. "I stay home in the
winter to build up inventory,” he explains. “The furnace gets shut
down in the summer but I still have plenty of other work to do."
Packing orders, rebuilding equipment, organizing materials, and
thousands of other thankless tasks get accomplished during this
time.
Pennebaker prefers to say he's a "glassmaker" instead of a
"glassblower." The term glassblower has been used and misused so
much that it carries very little specific meaning. "Most people
associate the term glassblower with a person who melts rods of
pre-made glass to form items working at a torch," he elaborates.
"The specific title for that type of glassworker is 'lampworker.'
Lampworking is a glass technique that is very different from what
I do. It requires a different set of skills."
Pennebaker has created several projects since joining the
community of artists at Glass Artists Gallery in November of 2002.
To view more of Pennebaker’s Chandelier’s, Sconces and Pendants, click here.
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