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by PRATT FINE ARTS CENTER
For all your art supply needs, pick Blick.
40% OFF
ONE NON-SALE, IN STOCK ITEM
VALID 5/4/13 TO 5/18/13
Blick Art Materials, Retail Inc., coupon must be surrendered at time of purchase; no copies will be honored. Limit one coupon per day. Valid only on non-sale, in-stock items. Not valid with any other discounts or promotions, phone/mail/ internet orders, Custom Framing/Printing orders, and purchases of furniture or gift cards.
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SEAT TLE
1600 BROADWAY (CORNER OF PINE & BROADWAY) 206-324-0750
Learn to work with kiln-glass at Pratt. Reinforce your skills with Bullseye’s online videos.
• Review techniques in the comfort of your own studio • Get project ideas • Enjoy new videos, added year round www.bullseyeglass.com/keo
Proud to support Pratt Fine Arts Center
table of contents
schedule of events
Welcome .............. 5
5:00 pm
Auction Supporters .............. 6
Doors Open
Honorary Chair .............. 7
Silent Auctions Begin
In Remembrance .............. 8
Hors D’oeuvres
Auctioneers .............. 9
6:15 PM
Bidder’s Guide ............ 10
Closing of Silent Auction One
Raise the Paddle ............ 12
Martini Glasses ............ 13
Chihuly Drawing.............. 14
6:30 PM
Closing of Silent Auction Two 6:45 PM
Closing of Silent Auction Three
About Pratt / Staff ............ 15 Silent Auction One ............. 17 Silent Auction Two ............ 31 Silent Auction Three ........... 47
Live Auction ............ 61
7:00 PM
Seating for Dinner, Live Auction, & Fun!
AL I CE: I’m afraid so. You’re entirely bonkers. But I’ll tell you a secret. All the best people are.
Dear Friends, Welcome to The Mad Pratter, Pratt Fine Arts Center’s 31st Annual Fine Art Auction! We are thrilled that you could join us for this wondrous journey down the rabbit hole. May the magic and brilliance of our contributing artists fulfill you and may your passion for Pratt inspire you to bid boldly and take a little piece of Wonderland home with you this evening.
F IN E ART AU C TI O N 2013
M AD H ATTE R : Have I gone Mad?
Tonight we stand in celebration and marvel of our dear friend Kathy Gerlich, our Honorary Chair, our Alice. Year after year, Kathy applies her talent and resources to the success of our auction, and the ultimate success of Pratt Fine Arts Center. Tonight we honor Kathy for her service and leadership, and we thank her deeply for continuing on these grand adventures with us. Tonight we also celebrate the generous hearts of our Honorary Committee, who have provided unparalleled assistance to our mission, time and time again. We kneel in humble gratitude before this group, our royal court for the evening. Lastly, we raise a tower of teacups to the maddest Pratter of all, Walt Riehl, our amazing Auction Chair of the past two years. Curiouser and curiouser we are as to how he does it so well. In collaboration with an incredible committee, Walt has delivered yet another signature Pratt event this year and we are all deeply grateful. This is a very important date! Thank you all for joining us! Cheers,
Bob Swain
Steve Galatro
BOARD PRESI DENT
E XE C UT IV E DIR E C T OR
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Pratt Auction Sponsors PRESENTING SPONSOR The Klorfine Foundation
Live Auction Sponsor Roger & Nancy MacPherson
Silent Auction Sponsor Legacy at Pratt Park
Martini Glass Sponsors Richard & Barbara Wortley Glass Distillery
Artist Table Sponsors Wet Dog Glass
Benefactor Table Sponsors Kathy Gerlich Mimi Pierce Richard & Barbara Wortley
TABLE SPONSORS Brown & Brown, Seattle Chihuly Garden & Glass Manya & Gary Drobnack Jan & Carl Fisher Brian Flock & Samantha Kanner Jonathan Himschoot & Kevin Cunningham Walt & Pat Riehl Ann & Ron Suter
Volunteers and Live Auction Donors Eric Anderson Lori Bailey Charles Smith Wines Chihuly Garden & Glass Cornish College of the Arts Soni Dave-Schock, Bottlehouse Madeline Dow Lisa Hasegawa Richard Frank-Huff Kirsten Graudins Jan & Carl Fisher Gregor Jamroski Peggy and Brian Kreger Flora Mace & Joey Kirkpatrick Wassef and Racha Haroun, Mamnoon Marqueen Hotel Michael Monroe On the Boards Redhook Walt & Pat Riehl Rotie Cellars Frances Smersch Jim and Fawn Spady Justine Thayer Theo Chocolates The Marcus Whitman Hotel Tian Wang John Yeager
Sponsor Gifts Provided By: Two Tone Studios DeCicio Artisan Glass Elle’s Beads Tiffany Noel Thiele Roger Moore Levi Belber Ilfant
PRATT VIDEO Produced by John Yaeger Sponsored by Roger & Nancy MacPherson
Original Alice In Wonderland engravings by John Tenniel, ca. 1865 PA G E
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Auction catalog and invitation design by Dan D Shafer, dandy-co.com
HONORARY COMMITTEE Kathy Gerlich, Chair Chap & Eve Alvord Michael & Cathy Casteel Lyn & David Bishop Michael Greer Roger & Nancy MacPherson Gary & Mary Molyneaux Michael & Bernadette Monroe Mimi Pierce Jenny Pohlman & Sabrina Knowles
AUCTION COMMITTEE Walt Riehl, Committee Co-Chair Madeline Dow Jan Fisher Adam Glant Liz Lee Erika Dalya Massaquoi Teri St. Onge Barbara Wortley Richard Wortley
AUCTION JURY LaMar Efaw Michael Monroe Paula Stokes Sarah Traver
PRATT WOULD LIKE TO THANK: Lori Bailey Justine Thayer Tian Wang Rong Yan John Yeager
Dear Kathy,
F IN E ART AU C TI O N 2013
To Our Honorary Chair, Kathy Gerlich
We revel in the opportunity to honor you this evening; we are delighted at the chance to recognize your exceptional service to Pratt Fine Arts Center over the years. You are a model of generosity and dedication and you contribute to our success in so many ways. You are a champion of our mission in the community and never miss an opportunity to sing our praises. You not only attend the auction every year, but you also donate an incredible work of art, often of your own making. Your fervor for Pratt is infectious and your kindness is beyond admirable. No doubt a reflection of your own artistic passion and talent, you have helped make the creative experience possible for thousands of others at Pratt. For this, we are deeply grateful. Please accept our true and heartfelt thanks for all that you’ve done for us. Sincerely,
All of Us The Artists and Advocates of Pratt Fine Arts Center
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In Remembrance This year, we mourned the loss of two extraordinary women who touched the lives of so many people. Tonight, we honor their memories and reflect on their incredible gifts to our community. These amazing, spirited women are no longer with us, but their influence will continue to have an impact for many years to come.
Susan Balshor (1949 – 2013)
Susan Balshor held M.A. degrees in Sculpture and Philosophy. Her narrative, mixed media artwork incorporated glass, metal, clay, wood, paint and paper. For years, Susan was a fixture at Pratt, teaching mold making and kiln formed sculpture, as well as an active member of the Education Committee. She was also on staff and an instructor at Pilchuck Glass School, as well as a scholarship recipient at Pilchuck and Penland School of Crafts. She was included in Corning’s New Glass Review in 2009 and Bullseye Emerge in 2008. In addition to her love of art, Susan had a deep love of music and was an avid dancer. She co-founded the Valse Café Orchestra and started The Masquerade at Century Ballroom. Beloved by her students for her knowledge, dedication, and service to artistic vision, Susan is dearly missed.
Mary Shirley (1939 – 2013)
Mary and her husband Jon have been known for their exceptional art collection and support of arts organizations, including SAM and Pratt. Over the last twenty years, the Jon and Mary Shirley Scholarships in Glass have supported many of the finest emerging glass artists in the Pacific Northwest, to pursue their art and develop significant bodies of work in the studios of Pratt Fine Arts Center. Jon and Mary were also major contributors to the Capital Campaign which allowed Pratt to purchase its Jackson Street property; their investment remains a huge source of potential for expansion and growth.
The contributions of Susan Balshor and Mary Shirley have been truly transformational and their legacies will be carried forward at Pratt with great respect and everlasting care.
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Kip Toner Auctioneer Kip Toner holds the prestigious Benefit Auctioneer Specialist (BAS) designation from the National Auctioneers Association (NAA). The NAA SELECTED Kip among its 6,000 members to write the curriculum and examination for the BAS course, which he now teaches nationwide. His firm, Kip Toner Benefit Auction (KTBA), is one of the largest benefit auction companies in the nation. With a staff of twelve auctioneers across the nation and full-time office staff in Seattle, KTBA successfully facilitates more than 160 fundraising auctions annually. He is past chair of the Seattle University Board of Regents, treasurer of the Seattle Architectural Foundation Board of Directors, a member of the Board of Directors for PONCHO (one of the largest fund raising auctions in the world), and many other civic and charitable organizations.
Ian Lindsay KTBA Auctioneer Ian has had the pleasure of assisting many benefit auctions over the past 5 years. A professional actor, opera singer, and drama teacher, Ian realized that he could help non-profit organizations to raise critical funds and decided to work to become a benefit auctioneer as well. His style helps to keep an event light, fun, tastefully appropriate, and on schedule and makes Ian a favorite with diverse groups. He has recently helped schools, arts organizations, churches, and social service agencies to significantly increase their revenue from previous years.
F IN E ART AU C TI O N 2013
Meet Our Auctioneers
Ian brings years of benefit auction planning experience to his work as an auctioneer, allowing him to help organizations to implement current best practices. His background in planning benefit auctions gives Ian the ability to seamlessly incorporate the changes and surprises that are part of every fundraising event, while simultaneously considering the financial, donor, and guest considerations related to any change in the program. Ian is a proud graduate of Seattle University where he studied Philosophy and Drama. He has had the great privileges of living abroad in Madrid and New Delhi, and loves exploring different cultures.
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31st Annual Fine Arts Auction
Bidder’s Guide Bidder Numbers You will be given a bidder number on a card at the registration desk as you enter. All sales will be recorded by that number. If you and your guest requested separate bidder numbers, you will each receive a packet listed under the individual names. If you requested a shared bidder number, you will receive a single bidder packet with two bidder cards enclosed.
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Live Auction The Live Auction will begin simultaneously with dinner service at 7:15 pm, and will continue until all items have been auctioned.
Silent Auctions To bid on items in the Silent Auction, write your bid number opposite the dollar amount on the bid sheet. The amount of your bid should never be less than the incremental bid specified on the sheet. You may skip lines if you wish.
To make a bid, hold up your bid card. The highest bid number acknowledged by the auctioneer will be the purchaser. In the event of a dispute between bidders, the piece may be withdrawn and new bidding initiated at the discretion of the auctioneer.
In order to guarantee your purchase of a silent auction item, enter your bid number in the “Guaranteed Purchase” box. There may be only one number in the Guaranteed Purchase box. The person whose number appears in the box will immediately own the item.
We are delighted to once again welcome Kip Toner to Pratt as Auctioneer for this evening’s festivities. In addition to his frequent appearances at Pratt, Kip Toner and his organization conduct over 160 charity and fundraising auctions across the country each year. His appreciation and understanding of the visual arts are evident to all those fortunate enough to see him work.
At the close of each Silent Auction, an auction staff person will circle the highest written bid for each
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item. Sheets listing successful bids by bidder number and by piece number will be posted as soon as possible. In the event of a dispute, at the discretion of the auctioneer, final oral bids will be taken from those who have already placed written bids.
Items become the property and responsibility of the purchaser upon receipt. All sales are final the night of the auction.
Sales Tax, Deductibility, and Service Fees
Fund-A-Need After item #30 of the Live Auction, as announced by Auctioneer Kip Toner, attendees will be invited to support Pratt’s access program for studio artists through a call for Fund-a-Need pledges. When Kip Toner announces the level at which you would like to participate, hold your bid card high until he reads off your bidder number.
No sales tax will be charged for purchases made during this event. Pratt Fine Arts Center is a registered 501(c)(3) charitable organization. If your purchase price for an item exceeds its fair market value as stated in the catalog, the overage may be deductible as a charitable contribution. Please consult with your financial and tax advisor for details. Art purchases only will be subject to a standard 10% Processing Fee which will be added to your purchases upon check-out. These fees allow us to provide you with quality auctioneer services, accurate data entry staff, and professional cashiers.
Express Pay You will be offered an opportunity to enroll in Express Pay upon check-in. By registering for Express Pay, you can avoid standing in line to pay for your purchases at the end of the night, and can proceed directly to pick-up. To participate in Express Pay, you may provide a designated check-in assistant with a signed imprint of your credit card, or a signed check made out to Pratt Fine Arts Center. These will be kept on file for the event, and at the close of the evening, your purchases will be paid as you have directed. Receipts for those items you purchase will be delivered to you at your table during the evening. A statement of all charges will also be mailed. If you do not make a purchase during the evening, your charge slip or check will be shredded.
Check Out Pratt Fine Arts Center accepts Visa, MasterCard, American Express, Discover, cash, and personal checks as payment for auction purchases. Express Pay participants will have received a copy of their bid form(s) at their tables. They may proceed directly to pick-up without being obliged to stop at the Cashier’s station first. Those not using Express
F IN E ART AU C TI O N 2013
Pay should stop at the Cashiers’ station after 9 p.m. to receive a statement of purchases based on their bidder number and to make payment. You will need to show this purchase statement with proof of payment to the assistants at the art Pick-up station.
Delivery Pratt is happy to provide complimentary delivery of auction purchases within the Greater Seattle area. Please complete a delivery request form at the Cashier station at the time you make payment to arrange delivery to your home or business. Shipping to other areas is available at the purchaser’s expense.
General Information Pratt Fine Arts Center reserves the right to add or withdraw items to or from the auction without notice. Every attempt has been made to describe and catalog all items accurately, but all items are offered “as is, where is.” The values listed are estimates of fair market value only. Items have not been appraised. Each person attending the auction assumes all risks and hazards related to the auction and items obtained at the auction. Each attendee agrees to hold harmless from any liability arising there from Pratt Fine Arts Center, its elected and appointed officials, members, and employees, the auctioneer, the auction company and its agents and employees, the event organizers, sponsors and volunteers connected to the auction. PA G E
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Raise the Paddle At Pratt, we strive to make art accessible to everyone: access to arts education, access to highly specialized equipment, access to the transformative experience of making art. Revenue generated through Raise the Paddle will be used in direct support of our mission, helping to make the creative experience possible for the widest possible community. Your contribution will allow Pratt to: • Keep class prices and studio rental rates to a minimum • Offer free weekend classes for local children • Provide scholarships and tuition assistance for those in need, and • Bring renowned Master Artists to campus to share creative intelligence and unique perspectives from all around the world Raise your paddle to spark over 20,000 imaginations in our creative community this year. Raise your paddle to provide supplementary arts education for over 750 children and teens this year. Raise your paddle to foster the careers of over 300 hundred local artists who will make their living through our studios this year. Pratt Fine Arts Center is so much more than a place to make art - it is a dynamic, creative community and you can have an impact on its future.
Matching Challenge Tonight you are presented with a very special opportunity. When you raise your paddle in support of Pratt Fine Arts Center, your gift will be multiplied! We are delighted to present a matching grant opportunity provided by the generous trustees of the Klorfine Foundation. The Foundation will match up to $200,000 in funds raised during Raise the Paddle this evening. This incredible support from the Foundation will be invested in a fund that will help sustain Pratt for years to come. This is a rare opportunity to multiply your investment and leverage each generous dollar to its highest possible impact. Will you join us in meeting the challenge?
Giving Levels Our Auctioneer will provide opportunity to give at the levels below. Consider your willingness to give and choose one or more levels to total your contribution.
25,000 $10,000 $5,000 $2,500 $1,000 $500 $250 $100 $50
$
Thank you for your support!
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F IN E ART AU C TI O N 2013
Martini Glasses A special collection of hand-blown martini glasses are for sale this evening for $150. Each piece was created by a Pratt artist and the purchase of a martini glass includes bottomless drinks throughout the auction, including our special cocktail: Where the Sidewalk Ends (see recipe below). Be sure to make your selection early! There are a limited number of glasses and you won’t want to miss out on this Pratt tradition. This year we are featuring martini glasses by: Mike Cozza
Chuck Lopez
Nick Davis
Chris Schulke
Rich Langely
John Hogan
Lydia Boss
Megg White
Jason Bauer
Jared Rosenacker
Justin Catron
Tyler Stupich
Special Thanks to our Martini Sponsors: Richard and Barbara Wortley Glass Distillery
Tonight’s Specialty Cocktail was designed for The Mad Pratter by:
Where the Sidewalk Ends Lemon-Infused Glass Vodka broVo Rose Geranium Liqueur Scrappy’s Cardamom Bitters Orange Flower Water Lemon Gastrique Delicious.
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Own a Chihuly! Enter The Mad Pratter drawing and have the chance to own Chihuly’s Old China Blue Basket Set with Lamp Black Lip Wraps.
Dale Chihuly, Old China Blue Basket Set with Lamp Black Lip Wraps, 2000, 12 x 13 x 13
$
100 per ticket, no limit per person Must be present to win
From his Basket series, the piece presents the asymmetrical forms in a stunning, blue hue. During a 1977 visit to the History Museum at the Washington State Historical Society in Tacoma, Chihuly was impressed by a presentation of Northwest Coast Indian baskets. Struck by the slumped forms the baskets had taken over time, Chihuly sought to replicate the effects of weight, gravity and time of the wavering forms in his artwork.
Hurry!
Only 200 tickets available and these tickets are exclusively sold at the auction PA G E
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Pratt Fine Arts Center began in 1976 as a tiny art facility with a big vision to build a community of artists and an educational center providing the tools and the training to support the creation of art. Today, Pratt stands exactly as its founders envisioned… The Place to Make Art! For nearly 37 years, Pratt has been providing the Northwest community with the opportunity to experience art. Through a myriad of classes and workshops, Pratt teaches more than 3,500 students annually and its studios serve more than 300 working artists each year. Its classes, lectures and programs reach more than 20,000 people annually. Affordable studio space with an unparalleled array of equipment provides artists of all ages and abilities with the opportunity to learn, to experiment and to create.
Pratt Staff
Board of Trustees
Steve Galatro, Executive Director Scott Ball, Sculpture Studio Manager Rebecca Chernow, Studio Coordinator, Hot & Cold Glass Brandi Clark, Director of Programs David Clark, Sculpture Technician Susan Clifford Jamroski, Development Director Rand Coburn, Charger Julie Custer, Development Associate & Grant Writer Rosie Daniel, Community Outreach Coordinator Ryan Davis, Operations Manager Lise Graham, Front Desk Manager William Herberholz, Janitorial Technician Adam Hollis, Studio Coordinator, Wood Todd Jannausch, Wood Studio & Color Darkroom Technician Myra Kaha, Youth and Education Associate Kamla Kakaria, Print & 2D Studio Manager Brennan Kasperzak, Charger Chuck Lopez, Glass Studio Technician Cheryl Matson, Studio Coordinator, Flameworking Jacob Mans, Studio Coordinator, Jewelry/Metals Marilyn Montufar, Evening Administrative Assistant Renee Muñoz, Evening Administrative Assistant Jan O’Callahan, Information Technician Anne Randall, Studio Assistant, Jewelry/Metals Mark Rudis, Studio Coordinator, Sculpture Sasha Tepper-Stewart, Studio Coordinator, Kilnforming Rebbecca Tomas, Jewelry/Metals Manager Crystal Valdez, Evening Administrative Assistant David Vogan, Facilities Assistant Lindsay Walter, Marketing Director Rickie Wolfe, Studio Coordinator, Printmaking
Bob Swain – President Brian Flock – Vice President Jan Fisher – Secretary Ronda Miller – Treasurer Richard Wortley – Past President Greg Clark Erika Dalya Massaquoi Madeline Dow Richard Frank-Huff Adam Glant Jonathan Himschoot Norma Klorfine Liz Lee Susan Mersereau Kevin Noschese Mimi Pierce Walt Riehl Kirsten Tollefson Katherine Wax – Board Intern
F IN E ART AU C TI O N 2013
About Pratt
Pratt Advisory Board Chris Abrass Yvonne Banks Sandra Carlson Michael Casteel Manya Drobnack Roger MacPherson Gary Molyneaux Michael Monroe Debora Moore Ann Suter
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WORLD
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LACE SHUTTLECOCK Glass with steel stand 2012 11 x 15 x 11
750
$
100
ITEM
Tyler Kimball, a glass artist residing in Seattle, uses his medium to delve into the inner-workings of the world of games. Whether lawn, board, or adolescent-curiosity themed, Kimball displays the emotions hiding within boredom’s worst enemy; games. Kimball is an adolescent proponent or Pratt Fine Arts Center. He received the Jon and Mary Shirley Scholarship in 2009 and is a constant grateful user of Pratt’s fine facilities. www.tylerkimball.com
UNTITLED Watercolor, pencil and inkjet 2012 12 x 8.5
101
Jocelyn Cassaniti enjoys balancing her creative pursuits with her new role as a mother, and has taken many classes at Pratt Fine Arts Center.
ITEM
Jocelyn Cassaniti 175
$
Pam Galvani FELIX CULPA Fused glass 2002 15” x 15” x 2”
$
350
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Much of what appears to be accidents in life becomes the start of new discoveries. “Felix Culpa” plays with that potential. Pam Galvani has been a calligrapher for more than 35 years. Her training in calligraphy has been through the traditional method of studying with master calligraphers. Additionally, she has taken many hours of fine art and graphic design courses at various colleges and universities and at art centers including Pratt Fine Arts Center. Pam’s calligraphy and monotypes have been exhibited at galleries in Washington, Oregon, and Kansas. She lives on Bainbridge Island.
ITEM
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Tyler Kimball
pamelagalvani.blogspot.com
CELEBRATION Soft glass
$
325
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Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
103
Leslie Thiel has been teaching at Pratt over 7 years. Her lamp-work bead classes are innovative. they include sculptural floral and curved beads. “Pratt is where I found the support to learn and teach. The friendships that I’ve made through Pratt have helped me to grow as an artist. The challenges presented by my fellow artists and willingness to share information have been a great asset. I love being a part of Pratt. It’s where I go for fun, information and community involvement.” Leslie’s work can be found at 5th Avenue Glass Blowing in Seattle, Proctor Art Gallery, Tacoma and Gallery 3 Puyallup.
ITEM
Leslie Thiel
Wood block 2011 8 x 24
$
300
Jennifer Bennett LEGACY Steel, antique lace & crystals, pearl and silver 2013 1 x 2.5 x 2.5
$
320
106
ITEM
This brooch is about what we inherit from our family. The imperfect, circular steel form represents our shell. Other objects are more literal - fragments of my great-great grandmother’s lace and bits of chandeliers that once hung in now demolished homes. As what we know disintegrates before us, we must choose what we preserve about our past and why. Jennifer is a northwest jeweler, artist and teacher. She currently teaches youth at Coyote Central. Her work can be found at SAM, TAM, BAM and KOBO, as well as at
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LITTLE BIRD SERIES
104
Peggy Murphy is a painter and sometimes printmaker. She graduated from the University of Washington with a BFA in Painting. Ideas about landscape and horticulture have a large influence on her work. She is a huge fan of Pratt, where she has participated in numerous classes and workshops.
ITEM
Peggy Murphy
www.dilucedesign.com.
HOLLOWED EYES & HIVE Intaglio 2010
$
300
107
Isabella Leary’s work is a fantastical reflection of deteriorating industrial landscapes, overtaken by mutated flora. It also explores the atmospheric relationships of characters entangled within these landscapes.
ITEM
Isabella Leary
www.flickr.com/photos/canopic/ sets/72157629124678511
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PURPLE DAHLIA Fused glass/steel and hardwood stand
$
300
ITEM
108
“Mad Hatter: “Why is a raven like a writing-desk?” “Have you guessed the riddle yet?” the Hatter said, turning to Alice again. “No, I give it up,” Alice replied: “What’s the answer?” “I haven’t the slightest idea,” said the Hatter”
Hava Edery BEADS IN SPACE Glass beads 2013 7.5 x 5 x 1.25
$
300
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Beads don’t necessarily mean jewelry. Glass beads are an inspiration for any kind of art. This one allows you to choose how to enjoy it, vertical or horizontal, on the wall or independently standing; and you can gently rotate the beads to find the pattern you like. The beads in this piece were made with soft glass, red brown base bead then rolled on silver leave and then encased partially with transparent aqua. A combination that creates beautiful colors and a unique pattern on each bead.
ITEM
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Roger Moore
www.etsy.com/shop/HavaBeads
TUBE NECKLACE Beads on rubber tubing 2013 13 x 8
$
350
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Materials are Joanne Sugura’s inspiration. Sometimes the most common objects can become sublime. I find great joy in transforming plumbing supplies, rubber tubing and washers into adornment. These are one-of-akind pieces of jewelry for a unique and confident person.
ITEM
Joanne Sugura
http://urbanarchaeologyjewelry.com
GALAXY SERIES PENDANT Glass and silver 2013 Set of two 1.33 in. Pendant & 18 in. Chain
75
$
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Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
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After a 30 year career as a freelance photographer, Chuck Pefley began exploring 3D glass art. Pratt Fine Arts Center and its staff have been instrumental in allowing him to reinvent himself! He wishes to especially thank Stacy Frost, Cheryl Matson, Rachel Rader and Justin Bagley for their generous mentoring.
ITEM
Chuck Pefley
www.chuckpefley.com
Stainless steel & copper wire, solid copper chain 2012 Set of two Pendant: 3.5 x 1.5 x 0.8, Earrings: 1.3 x 0.75 x 0.2
$
319
www.estherervin.com
BUTTERFLY CROWN Aquatint, linocut, chine colle 2012 14 x 18
$
325
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This print is from a series of crowns and dresses. Magda starts each print by creating a linoleum cut of a crown or dress motif. She then fills in the printed shape with a pattern or design. Finally, she adds the pattern and design to the motif either by cutting up and collaging on an older print or by printing directly onto the motif, integrating intaglio, collograph, linocut and monotype into the finished pieces. Magda’s work has been included in national exhibits at galleries and universities and is in the King County Portable Works collection.
ITEM
Magda Baker
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CONE NECKLACE AND EARRINGS
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Esther’s works are part of a continuing series, which explores the spiral as a metaphor for nature and as the entrance to the spirit world. Many of her works are derived from living organisms, both microscopic and macroscopic. She is a former recipient of the Gregory M. Robinson Scholarship and PONCHO Artist in Residence award at Pratt Fine Arts Center. She was a resident at the James W. Washington Foundation. Her works have been shown in numerous juried exhibitions throughout the region. Esther’s jewelry is available at the Northwest African American Museum gift shop and at Al Doggett Studio in Seattle.
ITEM
Esther Ervin
www.magdabaker.com
UNTITLED Collaged monotype 2009 23 x 19
$
325
Rosie Daniel OWL BOOKEND PAIR Sandcast glass 2012 5.75 x 4.25 x 2.5
175
$
114
ITEM
Largely influenced by the Japanese aesthetic, Annie Lewis respects and explores relationships and composition. The play of shape and pattern, the expression of line, and the dialogue of positive and negative space play vital roles in her abstract work. Annie has shown at Fetherston Gallery, SAM Rental Gallery and Bainbridge Arts and Crafts.
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Rosie Daniel is an endearing character in the Seattle visual art community. Having worked in a museum as a lowly assistant, in a gallery as a humble steward, and now at a nonprofit arts center as a... well, you know... She has enjoyed a well-rounded profile of the Seattle arts scene. This is her debut as an artist (huzzah!) and she is thrilled to be featured alongside the professional artists she has long admired.
ITEM
Annie Lewis
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Fused glass on metal stand (lead free) 2013
$
300
Cheryl Pope PURPLE PASSION Soda lime glass & stainless steel 2013
$
300
Jite Agbro UNTITLED Print
$
550
117
ITEM
As an artist, Cheryl has used many different mediums, paint, ink, clay, even computers, and she thinks she may have finally found her one true love - Glass! It is beautiful and fun to work with (and melt). This “Wedding Gift/ Hostess Set” is made using a Reichenbach Lampworking cane called Dark Multi, which changes colors in miraculous ways as it is being melted on the torch. Truly amazing! She added silver to the glass because everything looks better with something shiny.
ITEM
BLACK BOWL With 3D SILVER & GOLD MICA
116
This bowl showcases 3 dimensional mica handiwork that cannot be duplicated by factory mass production. It is Jane Edgley’s goal to create beautiful and useful items that are unique and unlike anything purchased from a department store. Most of her current work features multiple 3D layers of color and sparkle, contrasted with jet black glass. The root inspiration is her fondest memory of kindergarten when she made a stained glass window out of colored cellophane and black paper. Jane learned how to fuse glass at Pratt.
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Jite Agbro has worked as an artist for over fourteen years. Her main medium is printmaking, though she works across a variety of mediums including oil, acrylic, encaustic, textile, and metal. Known for the experimental aspects of her work, she continues to push the boundaries of works on paper by combining materials and techniques. “I have explored many themes in the intervening years but the visual impact of written language continues to be a constant in my work. Graffiti, pictographs, illuminated manuscripts all of these forms of embellished communication are a common thread in all my work.” - Jite Agbro
ITEM
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Jane Edgley
www.jiteagbro.com
GOLDEN ELEGANCE Lampwork glass 2012 Set of two
$
460
www.bobhoffmeyer.com
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119
Fascinated and stimulated by the endless possibilities of lampwork glass, Bob makes Pratt his place to create art. “Golden Elegance” expresses one of his current interests combining molten glass with precious metals. This piece utilizes just two elements, transparent colorless glass and fine silver foil. The two elements combine when propertly treated in the torch flame to produce a sparkling glow. This is a stunningly elegant accessory for a special occasion. A founding member of the Maui Glass Artists Association, Bob’s work has been represented in numerous juried and non-juried shows, exhibitions and galleries in Washington, California and Hawaii. 19 inch necklace and earrings.
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Bob Hoffmeyer
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
Lampwork glass 2012 Set of two 18.25 inch necklace and earrings
$
520
www.bobhoffmeyer.com
THE LITTLE BLACK DRESS Lampwork glass 2010 Set of two 19.5 inch necklace and earrings
$
480
121
Fascinated and stimulated by the endless possibilities of lampwork glass, Bob makes Pratt his place to create art. “The Little Black Dress” expresses one of his current interests - working with silver infused glass. This piece features twenty-nine handmade beads in black and luscious red. The beads are decorated with shards of silver rich glass that provide and iridescent sheen. The piece is a striking and dramatic accessory for a formal night out.
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Bob Hoffmeyer
1 S IL ENT AU C TI O N
BLUE ONYX AGATE (DYED)
120
Fascinated and stimulated by the endless possibilities of lampwork glass, Bob makes Pratt his place to create art. “Blue Onyx Agate” expresses one of his current interests - creating beads to complement semi-precious stones in finished jewelry. This piece features a full strand of handmade, lampwork beads that show off the beautiful slice of dyed Blue Onyx Agate. One jewelry designer described the piece as appropriate for wear “any where, any how, any when”. A founding member of the Maui Glass Artists Association, Bob’s work has been represented in numerous juried and non-juried shows, exhibitions, and galleries in Washington, California, and Hawaii.
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Bob Hoffmeyer
www.bobhoffmeyer.com
BLACK & WHITE MINI CYLINDER Glass 2013 7 x 3.5 x 3.
$
320
Paul E. McKee SECONDO VERDE Acrylic on canvas and wood 2009 14 x 8 x 1.75
$
300
122
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Carrie Grula grew up outside of Philadephia and started blowing glass at Bucks County Community College. She continued her glass education at Rochester Institute of Technology and graduated with a BFA in glass from Alfred University in 2007. Since graduation, Carrie has relocated to Seattle where she continues to work with glass and create her own artwork.
123
Paul E. McKee has been painting reflections in skyscrapers since 2003. He believes that the distorted shapes allude to urban life beyond architecture. “Kitchen Italian” is part of a reflective portrait of Spokane that Paul made and exhibited in Spokane’s Chase Gallery in 2010. In an apartment building above the Italian Kitchen restaurant window frames become picture frames. “Secundo Verde” is named for the second or main course, and the green of the Italian flag.
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Carrie Grula
www.paulemckee.com
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23
SPIRAL FEDORA Fiber 2007 10 x 10 x 8
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325
Kathy Johnson BLACK & WHITE FOREVER Glass 2013 2 x 11
$
www.jeanhicks.com
350
125
Kathy Johnson has been working in glass most of her life. She has a Stained Glass Studio where she spends most of her time, in Burien, called Glass Expressions. She has found pleasure in teaching glass bead making at Pratt Fine Arts Center and has enjoyed spending time at such a wonderful center for the arts.
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$
124
Jean Hicks has been a Pratt instructor for over 18 years. She is an NEA Warhol Fellowship Artist, and has also worked on Trust Fellowship and 4 Culture artist projects.
www.glassexpressions.com
Gwen Kearns THE COLOR OF THE WORLD Monoprint 2011 28 x 20
$
300
126
Gwen Kearns is a local printmaker who received her BA in Studio Art from the University of Washington in 2005. She currently prints at the Kirkland Arts Center and has been exhibiting in and around the Seattle area for over six years. She constantly seeks out new styles and mediums in the world of printmaking to further expand her education and technique. “The Colors of the World” was created in a direct printing technique, where Kearns used her own stencil designs and directly rolled the ink onto the paper, leaving vague images of tress where the stencils pulled away. This piece represents the life of the forest in an imaginary sense, where color is no limitation.
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Jean Hicks
www.gwenkearns.blogspot.com
WONDERLAND Linocuts 2012 24 x 30
$
350
127
As a parent of a child with autism, “Alice in Wonderland” touches deeper, for Leslie Nan Moon. It has been suggested that Lewis Carroll may have been on the autism spectrum, which would help explain the wonderful nonsense content of the story. For Leslie, watching her son navigate through the world is a little like watching Alice. Sometimes he fits, sometimes he doesn’t. Sometimes he understands what others are saying and other times it makes no sense at all. Either way, Leslie will be by his side, walking through Wonderland together.
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Leslie Nan Moon
www.lesliemoon.wordpress.com PA G E
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Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
Block print 2012 12 x 6
$
325
www.cafepress.com/neinas www.nwencaustic.com/portfolio-neinas.html
Screen print, marker and paint 2013 12 x 16
$
350
Robin Oakes PURPLE HAZE I Fused glass 2009 12 x 12
$
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130
131
Robin Oakes has been working with glass for 30 years. She enjoys working with many forms of glass. This piece is part of her “Purple” series.
350
Trung Pham UNTITLED Oil on canvas 2011 18 x 24
$
Inna’s two favorite artists are erosion and decay. She loves the patina of time and tries to develop print and paint techniques that show a similar weather. This print is of a witch character who is passing through an abstract forest of small parts. She is looking for magic.
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LOOKING FOR MAGIC
129
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Inna Peck
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INNER STRENGTH
128
Theresa Neinas is a storyteller, and very often draws from what she knows (or thinks she knows). She finds that part of her comes across in her imagery. This is what she believes makes her work unique. Sometimes it speaks to people, other times... not so much. Theresa says she has plenty of her own ideas swimming around in her head, so any attempt to “match one’s couch” is going to be on a back burner, unless she has to rely on potatoes for all three meals, and “then we’ll talk.”
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Theresa Neinas
www.trung-pham.com
300
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Monoprint 2011 16 x 20
$
300
Jason Bauer STRAIGHT OPTIC VASE Glass 2013 2 x 11
$
300
Akiko Masker PINK 2 Watercolor on Canvas 2012 16 x 16
$
380
133
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Born in Ohio, Jason graduated from Bowling Green State University in 2010. Jason served as the Pittsburgh Glass Center Tech apprentice from 2010 to 2012, worked at the Chrysler Museum of Art as a studio assistant in 2012. He also worked on staff at Pilchuck in the summers of 2010 and 2012. He currently lives and works as an independent contractor in Seattle, WA.
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CATCH ME IV
132
This monoprint is from a series based on Janet’s photos of individual dancers at Pow Wows in New Mexico. This image captures the complex costumes and movements of the dancers and as well as the conflicts and tensions between traditional ways and modern life. Janet works in acrylic, print and collage. She has studied at Pratt and with artists in Seattle and Taos, NM. Janet has been in local shows both juried and solo, and her work has won awards at shows in Normandy Park and Burien. She also shows her work in Taos, NM, where she has been in studio tours and shows including several at the Millicent Rogers Museum.
134
Akiko Masker was born on the Japanese island of Hokkaido, where she learned to paint and draw at a young age. In 2005, she moved to Seattle, where she enrolled in the University of Washington’s BFA program. She is currently interested in blending traditional Japanese aesthetic values with Western art techniques. Drawn to the highly visual images of Japanese Buddhism, she explores this iconography while implementing traditional Western art techniques. She is inspired by how geometric and organic forms move in nature. Through her visual exploration she hopes to bring the abstract understanding of time, space and matter into consciousness.
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Janet Price
www.akikomasker.com
UNTITLED Monoprint and collage 2013 11 x 14
$
350
135
Dawn P. Endean’s work explores the world as seen through the lens of scientific inquiry and to portray the poetic mystery and inherent beauty of living organisms. Her imagery combines calligraphic elements and organizing geometry with anatomical and botanical forms. Sinuous line and organic shapes describe ambiguous organisms, both real and imagined. Taken together, these disparate elements suggest the documentation of a disintegrating world. Dawn P. Endean has exhibited in Seattle at Shift Collaborative Studio, the Jacob Lawrence Gallery, the Tashiro Kaplan Gallery, the Columbia City Gallery and Click Design, as well as at the Northwind Arts Center in Port Townsend.
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Dawn P. Endean
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Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
www.dawnendean.wordpress.com
450
Deidre Nelson MONOCHROME SERIES #1 Glass 2013 12 x 12
$
325
Christine Lee UNTITLED Monoprint 2012 14 x 14
$
300
Tim Willis UNDERNEATH THE VANCE CREEK TRESTLE Inkjet Print 2012 11 x 14
$
137
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$
1
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Watercolor on Gesso 2011 24 x 33
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LAKE UNION WATERLINE
136
138
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Suze Woolf likes to paint what is not usually “art worthy.” In fair weather she roams Seattle’s industrial waterfront, attracted to the large forms of commercial vessels, the gaunt geometry of gantry cranes and the multiplicity of their irregular reflections. In this piece, fishing boats await repair at the north end of Lake Union. Selections from this body of work have been exhibited at the Port of Seattle, Sea-Tac Airport, and been selected in watercolor competitions throughout the United States and Canada.
Deidre’s love of art started many years ago as a child. Creating just for the joy of creating. It continues to this day and has evolved into functional glass art. She has found her artistic expression explode in the world of glass, bringing both beauty and functional art into everyday life.
“Do you think I’ve gone round the bend?” “I’m afraid so. You’re mad, bonkers, completely off your head. But I’ll tell you a secret. All the best people are.”
139
Tim Willis pairs a childhood fascination with trains and a juvenile knack for being places he shouldn’t to photograph forgotten railroad history. When he’s not tied down to a desk, you can find him somewhere in the Cascade foothills with his camera.
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Suze Woolf
300
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27
HIT THE NORTH Book 2011
UNTITLED 2D 2013 20 x 20
300
Barbara Solomon STORM & WATER Monoprint 2009 Set of two, 19 x 21 each
$
600
Deidre Nelson MONOCHROME SERIES # 2 Glass 2013 12 x 12
$
325
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Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
141
Joan has been a printmaker in Seattle for eight years and teaches introduction to monoprints at the Kirkland Art Center. She participates in the volunteer Pratt Point Program and is a regular renter in the print studio at Pratt. She likes to combine various printmaking techniques and usually (but not always) works abstractly.
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Joan Mamelok $
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250
142
These prints are part of a series about the journeys of birds. In the first the birds fly through a rainstorm. In the second scarce water confines them ot life preserving water jugs. Barbara Solomon specializes in monoprints. Her work has been shown in a number of Northwest juried shows. In 2012 she was a finalist for Kirkland Art Center’s William Radcliffe Award. Pratt Fine Arts Center has been important in the development of her art practice. Barbara is represented by Red Contemporary Gallery in Steamboat Springs, Colorado. Her work is also available at the Kirkland Arts Center Store.
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$
140
This book accompanied a show at Greg Kecera in 2011 and was offered as a limited edition. Each book has hand-made, oneof-a-kind art included. Vic Haven was recently featured with a one-person installation in the “Elles” show at Seattle Art Museum.
143
Deidre’s love of art started many years ago as a child. Creating just for the joy of creating. It continues to this day and has evolved into functional glass art. She has found her artistic expression explode in the world of glass, bringing both beauty and functional art into everyday life.
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Victoria Haven
Linda M. Brooks BEYOND THE CITY, #1, 3 & 6 Acrylic on cardboard 2011 8 x 5.75
$
375
Carolyn Gracz LANDSCAPE #1 Monoprint chine colle 2013
$
300
Jonathan Matas UNTITLED $
350
145
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Linda M. Brooks has “created” most of her life after a banking career. She attended the Corcoran School of Art in Washington DC, receiving a Certificate in Fine Art/Drawing, then studied under DC artist/photographer William Christenberry. She received the Kenneth Stubbs Memorial Award for Drawing. Since returning to Seattle she has had one-person shows as well as group shows, and has been selected into juried shows, including the Bellevue Art Museum Pacific NW Annual.
1 S IL ENT AU C TI O N
300
ITEM
$
146
Carolyn Gracz is a native of upstate New York who studied design at the Fashion Institute of Technology, New York. Her 15 years as a graphic artist is a major influence on her print work. This work is part of a series of observations of the natural world, where she finds much of her inspiration. She had been making prints at Pratt for the last six years. Pratt has played an important and supportive role in her embrace of various forms of printmaking, including monoprint and etching.
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CITY STREETS
144
This piece is a tribute to the beauty of the city street grid and the always evolving urban form. The first layer of the print is laid down using pieces of orange plastic construction fencing as stencils, with other layers created using other monotype and screenprint techniques. Abbie’s work is inspired by her background in architecture, urban planning and real estate law. She’s a regular renter at the Pratt print studio and loves the supportive, generous and talented community of printmakers with whom she shares the studio.
147
This print was made by San Francisco artist, Jonathan Matas, who is from Seattle and was educated at Emily Carr in Vancouver BC. Jonathan was recently featured in the Huffington Post article on Live Artists in the Bay area and has held residencies at Facebook Headquarters and painted the laptop of Mark Zuckerberg.
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Abbie Birmingham
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Charcoal 2012 24 x 18
$
520
D’Arcie Beytebiere
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PATTERN BAR #5
201
D’Arcie Beytebiere has worked in glass for the past 10 years.
Fused glass 2010
400
BUBBLE CUFF Silver 2013 7x2
$
300
11 Pratt Artists ARTIST BOOK EXCHANGE 2012 Books
750
$
PA G E
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
202
This bracelet is part of a series of jewelry work exploring the artistic possibilities of manipulated and connected fused silver rings. Felicia Wartnik loves to create wearable art at the torch out of glass or silver. She has taught glass bead making at Pratt and teaches beadmaking and jewelry making classes annually at Glass Stock West in Oregon. Felicia’s work has been show at Pratt and in the International Society of Glass Beadmakers (ISGB) 2012 juried show, Venture.
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$
Felicia Wartnik
32
www.chubotin.com
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POWER
200
Pratt has been part of Yulia’s life since she came to Seattle 20 years ago from Kiev, Ukraine. For Yulia, figure study is the most interesting subject to which she dedicates most of her time, when she is not teaching.
203
The Artist Book Exchange is held by Pratt Fine Arts Center. Each Artist made 6 books and received 5 books in this exchange. The 6th book was donated to Pratt for the 2013 Annual Fine Art Auction. The artists are: Allison Birmingham, Carolyn Gracz, China Kay, Cynthia Hibbard, Emma Levitt, Jan Branaham, Kamla Kakama, Kelda Mantensen, Lisa Hasegawa, Rickie Walte and Rosie Daniel.
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Yulia Chubotin
Goache on paper 1988 20 x 24
850
$
Sam McMillen CHANTRELLOW Solid glass 2013
2
205
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CORDOVA
204
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Mary Ann Peters received a BA in Print Making from the University of California and a MFA from the University of Washington in Painting and Drawing. Her 2D work has been featured in one and two person shows at the Edmonds Community College, and James Harris Gallery of Seattle. Recent group shows at the James Harris Gallery have also featured Mary’s work, as did the Northwest Biennial and the Decade of Excellence Neddy Artist
Every Autumn chanterelles yield an ample supply of yummy to the adventurous forager. This chanterelle will bring the yummy to your home all year long.
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Mary Ann Peters
1,500
$
EMERALD CITY 2013 Kiln formed glass jewelry 2013 Set of four 18 inch chain, 2 inch pendant, adjustable ring and bangle
$
325
206
This is a four piece jewelry set, taking its inspiration from Pantone’s color of the year and the gorgeous city the artist calls home. The handcrafted vibrant green glass is paired with fluid silver lines, to evoke the feeling of new life and growth. Marja Huhta is the proprietor of Glass Elements. She creates modern, unique and colorful jewelry-art that can be worn every day. An instructor in the kiln forming studio, Marja enjoys being actively involved with students and the Pratt community.
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Marja Huhta
www.glasselements.org
UNTITLED Monotype, graphite, encaustic on wood pane 2012 16 x 16 x 0.75
$
600
207
Daphne Minkoff combines painting with imagery photographed during her travels. The images represent small “excerpts of life, a passing glance, a fleeting memory or momentary recollection of a place,” and the pairings are focused on how things intersect. Minkoff finds unconventional beauty through disparate elements, and her work is a unique balance of the mundane and poetic, abstract and realistic, bucolic and gritty. Daphne Minkoff received her BFA from Indiana University in Bloomington Indiana, and and MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design, with honors in painting. She has received numerous awards, including the Juror’s award from the Whatcom Museum in Bellingham, Washington.
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Daphne Minkoff
www.lindahodgesgallery.com
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1,200
$
Nick Davis PASSENGER Glass 2012 18 x 5 x 6
850
$
Leslie Ulrich PATCH WORK SERIES: BLACK + WHITE Paper quilt 2010 32 x 32.5
$
210
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Leslie received her MFA from the University of Washington in 1995. Her passion is textiles and quilts. She has been working on a series called “Patch Worked”, which involves upcycling paper bags by paintings, cutting and sewing the pieces back together in abstract, interpretive designs.
400
Kate Petty PARALLEL Encaustic on canvas 2009 12 x 24
700
$
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209
This sculpture in transparent grey and alabaster is part of a series using the visual properties of thick sculpted glass with interesting figurative compositions to draw the viewer in. Nick is a teacher, glass artist, and metal worker who lives and works in Seattle. He has been a renter, student, and occasional instructor at Pratt for the past seven years.
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Bronze 2012 10 x 8.5 x 11.5
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ISAIAH 2:4
208
Dan Broxon is a lifelong metalworker and potter, and first cast bronze in 1996. He came to the Pratt foundry in 2008 and is now Pratt’s newest foundry instructor. He has participated in several group shows and juried exhibitions, and shows regularly at Art Not Terminal Gallery. Dan produces, among other objects, religious figures, bronze age weapons and political pieces. This piece, Isaiah 2:4, is a natural progression on that line. The passage of scripture reads, “And he shall judge among the nations, and shall rebuke many people; and they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks; nation shall not life up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war anymore.”
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
211
Kate Petty (née Fluckinger) works primarily in oil paints and encaustics, with occasional ventures in metal and clay. She has been a contributor to Pratt Fine Arts Center since 2004. In her work Kate explores concepts of transition, metamorphosis and liminality - a state that is ambiguous and somewhat unconscious. Whereas subliminal is hidden, liminal is barely perceptible. It is a state of being in-between or at the threshold of something. Sometimes boundaries between worlds are well-defined; this piece suggest a spaciousness of between, somewhat hazy or fuzzy, like the transition from dreaming to wakefulness, or darkness to light.
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Dan Broxon
Kilncast glass and raku ceramics 2012 17 x 6 x 6
$
575
www.cristamatteson.com
Lampwork glass 2013 Set of two Necklace & Earring Set, 21 inch length
$
265
Roy Bruno GAVIA CRESCENTA XLII Glass 2011 5 x 24 x 3
$
400
Virginia HungateHawk ACCUMULATE Etching 2010 20 x 16
$
550
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www.chuckpefley.com
214
Years after completing a career in science, mathematics and artificial intelligence, Roy Bruno discovered glassblowing appealing to his artistic side and embraced it with a passion. His signature piece is a naew silhouette not seen before in glass offerings, the Gavia Crescenta. commonly known as a Crescent Loon, it is a recently evolved bird species that requires minimal care in captivity. Not particularly adept at floating on water, the Crescent Loon prefers an indoor nesting site on a mantel or shelf. Roy has studied at the Pilchuck Glass School, the Pratt Fine Arts Center and the Redmond School of Glass.
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PURPLE HAZE
213
After a 30 year career as a freelance photographer, Chuck Pefley began exploring 3D glass art. Pratt Fine Arts Center and its staff have been instrumental in allowing him to reinvent himself! He wishes to especially thank Stacy Frost, Cheryl Matson, Rachel Rader and Justin Bagley for their generous mentoring.
215
This print was created while Virginia Hungate-Hawk was a visiting artist at the Glasgow Print Studio in Scotland. This body of work combines both a macro and microscopic view; evoking ice crystals or moss, as well as a view of the earth from above. She borrows forms from cartography, biology, and geography to reference the natural world. Virginia has her MFA in printmaking from the University of Notre Dame, has exhibited nationally and internationally, including several print biennials. She is a printmaking instructor at Pratt and at Kirkland Art Center.
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Chuck Pefley
2 S IL ENT AU C TI O N
SUNFLOWER HEAD
212
Crista’s inspiration comes from the time spent on her garden, with all the plants and animals that inhabit it. Her work reflects the connection she feels with the environment after a long day of digging in the dirt. She received a PONCHO/Pratt Artist in Residence Scholarship in 2010 and the John and Mary Shirley Scholarship in 2012. In 2011 she was awarded a Juror’s Choice Award at the Pratt Auction. She is a new member of Northwest Designer Craftsmen. Crista is a Textile graduate of California College of the Arts.
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Christa Matteson
www.virginiadorothy.com PA G E
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IVY ON BED GREEN Enamel on panel 2005
800
$
216
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Francisco’s first contact with photography was at the age of 12 was taking pictures of chickens in his backyard with his father’s camera. Since then he has been shooting travel and lifestyle images for a number of international clients while based in Spain and the Philippines. He holds a degree in Anthropology and Communications from Goldsmiths College, London. He still gets to photograph chickens every so often. www.francisco-guerrero.com
REDRESS Etching 2012 28 x 30
$
450
217
Cynthia Hibbard has been printing at Pratt for roughly five years, alternating printmaking with painting. What inspires her, besides whatever she’s thinking about in the shower, is form, color, oddities, surprises, and unintentional consequences. Nature, the human landscape, intricate constructs - whatever lands before her eyes on any given day - all are compelling.
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Cynthia Hibbard
www.cynthiahibbard.com
Molly Magai CONTAINERS Oil on panel 2012 12 x 12
$
400
218
This painting is an image of shipping containers, seen from the West Seattle Bridge. It’s part of a long-running series exploring roads and freeways - a beautiful, otherworldly landscape that is artificial, created by humans for our own convenience. The paintings are made from snapshots taken from a moving vehicle, using an automatic camera. Molly Magai is a Seattle painter who has exhibited locally at many venues including the Centennial Center Gallery in Kent, Room 104, Speck, and the Washington State Convention Center.
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Francisco Guerrero
www.mollymagai.com
GREEN CHUNKY BRACELET Jewlery 2013
150
$
219
Tisha has been working with glass and jewelry making for over 30 years. Currently she blows tubes, cuts them into beads, finishes the ends and creates jewelry. She loves the clean lines, fluid nature and vast color options glass has to offer. Each piece is unique and designed to balance shape, texture, and color. All beads are strung on nickel silver foxtail chain and finished with sterling silver findings.
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Tisha Abrahamsen
www.facebook.com/andreglass
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36
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
Cement, felt, feathers and magnets 2013 12.5 x 6 x 1
$
600
www.studiochecha.com
ANUNCIOS ESPECTACULARES MULTIPLICADO #1 Serigraph 2013 22.25 x 28.25
1,000
$
221
David employs an archaeological perspective as he works with natural and man-made detritus found in landscape, in this case using discarded billboards (anuncios espectaculares) and the surrounding environment he photographed along the highways of Mexico. After altering the contrast of these photos, he then exposed the images to multiple screens, resulting in the layered serigraph. More of the “Anuncios Espectaculares” series and the ongoing work of his “beach” series can be seen at Lisa Harris Gallery.
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David W. Simpson
2 S IL ENT AU C TI O N
WEEK IN WONDERLAND
220
“Week in Wonderland” is a series of seven magnetic brooches displayed as an art installation. Cast cement combined with various materials such as felt, feathers and repurposed sterling silver results in a playful visual and tactile experience. Checha’s jewelry is functional art and is intended for those who are not afraid to make a statement and draw attention. It is inspired by her career in architecture. Having worked with construction materials for many years on grand scales, she now uses them to reveal their beauty and transform them into wearable objects.
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Checha Sokolovic
BLOSSOMING CHERRY ALL OVER THIS CITY
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Pat Bako
222
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www.lisaharrisgallery.com
223
Pat Bako is a Seattle-based artist, philanthropist, non-profit fundraiser and professional ski instructor. Her numerous talents make her work insightful and thought provoking.
Encaustic on wood 2012
700
$
Daniel L Cook HOUSE STARE Glass casting 2011 16 x 8 x 4
$
400
“Would you tell me, please, which way I ought to go from here?” “That depends a good deal on where you want to get to.” “I don’t much care where –” “Then it doesn’t matter which way you go.”
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AT THE SHORE Textiles 2011 25 x 16 x 5
$
325
224
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Drawn to the shore since moving to the Pacific Northwest twelve years ago, many of Dawn’s pieces reflect her love of the natural shoreline environment. Dawn is a 2D (printmaking) and 3D (sculptural textiles) artist. Dawn’s work can be seen at Fusions Art Gallery in Ocean Shores and the Kirkland Arts Center Store in Kirkland. You can also see more of Dawn’s work and follow the creative process on Dawn’s website at www.dawnrogal.com. This is the fourth year Dawn has donated artwork to the Pratt auction. Her husband enjoys the chicken. www.dawnrogal.com
Layne Cook ALLEY VIEW Oil on canvas 2011 24 x 24 x 1.25
$
900
225
This painting is one of a series based on a recent trip to Spain and Portugal. It’s about light, shadow and color, and the delight of views glimpsed through narrow cobblestone passageways. It’s about reliving through the painting process the memories of being in a wonderful foreign and historical place. Travel is only one of the inspirations for Layne’s work. She sees paintings everywhere - in cow pastures, jazz clubs and sailboat regattas - and places between. Her work is represented in Seattle by Alki Arts Gallery and Community Artists Program, and in Carmel, California by Edward Montgomery Fine Arts Gallery.
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Dawn Rogal
www.laynecook.com
KARAIKUDI Relief print with chine-collé 2012 26 x 20
$
400
Kate Dougherty NIALIX Solar plate etching 2008 23.5 x 24.5
$
550
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226
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Christina Carlyle Reed graduated from the University of Washington with a B.F.A. in Painting. She received the 2008/09 Seattle Print Arts Scholarship in Printmaking at Pratt Fine Arts Center and plunged into the exciting world of printmaking. In November 2012, she was awarded a one-person show in Pratt’s Gallery at Tashiro Kaplan where she presented a printbased installation, West Meets East. Christina creates work using relief and intaglio processes to explore dynamic and complex relationships in contemporary culture. Karaikudi was informed by travels in India where popular and religious iconography and historical and contemporary references are intermingled side by side.
227
Kate is a professional interior designer and multi-media artist. Her work often reflects her interest in architecture and the environment. During her world travels Kate frequently captures images or garners ideas that imply a sense of place in time. Ranging from intriguing architectural perspectives to simple studies in line and color, her work creates the essence of a place, memory or experience. She started printmaking at Pratt in the mid 1990’s and continues to working various mediums including printmaking, encaustic, watercolors and oil paints.
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Christina Carlyle Reed
$
425
Heather Kraft BAVARIAN CHINA EARRINGS Reclaimed vintage china and gold fill 2013 3 x 1.75 x 0.125
$
300
Moll Frothingham RENEGADE DREAMS 2 Mixed media 2013 24 x 18 x 1
$
450
229
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This donation is dedicated to Susan Balshor. Being of this generation, as an artist Heather Kraft is driven to reinvent our idea of the heirloom. To take these disregarded objects and reinvent them in a contemporary and dynamic form makes them once again accessible; to help people regain the consciousness of the objects in their lives. Heather has created a line of simple and elegant jewelry composed of vintage and contemporary porcelain tableware. Using the composition on the plate, elements are cut out and carved into simple shapes. These shapes are then arranged into compositions informed not only by each element but the imagery on their surface; and are fabricated using gold and silver findings.
2 S IL ENT AU C TI O N
Acrylic on canvas 2007 18 x 18
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DEPARTURE
228
Claire Jauregui is a California native who has called Seattle home since 2004. Jauregui graduated with a degree in art, creative writing and gender studies from Carnegie Mellon University in 2002 and earned an individual artist grant from the city of Chico, California the next year. In 2007, Jauregui was named a PONCHO Artist-in-Residence at Pratt. During her residency, she explored print techniques and used these explorations to create loose, spontaneous screen and monoprints. Jauregui currently explores process, composition, and color via painting and printmaking. She also designs and screenprints a line of eco-friendly cards and posters called Orange Twist.
230
Seattle native Moll Frothingham fell in love with the evocative power of light and color while studying lighting design as a theatre major at Smith College. She uses collage and mixed media to capture the dynamic but mysterious way energy moves in the world, from the ephemeral to the tangible. A member of the Pratt Community for the last five years, her work has been shown in solo and group shows throughout the area.
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Claire Jauregui
www.creative-nonconformity.com
LOST MARBLE WALL Fused glass 2012 6.5 x 15.5
$
400
231
This piece is a delicate melting of cats eye marbles into a wall or wave shape. It is part of the “Don’t Lose Your Marbles” series that Janice Marshall is working on. The marbles have been tack fused and the slumped into the wave form. The custom glass stand was made by Two Blue Mule Functional Art and Design Studio.
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Janice Marshall
PA G E
39
TRACE TWELVE: TILL Mixed media fiber 2012 12 x 12 x 3
$
450
232
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Cameron Anne Mason is a sculptor who works with fabric. Fabric is fundamental to her process. It is an intimate part of our lives. It protects us from the elements, gives us comfort, and is a means to express ourselves. It is sensual and essential. Her artwork is about time, from the passing of the seasons to the geologic ages shown through layers of stone and its erosion. Nature and the evidence of human hands upon it, is her inspiration. She is an instructor at Pratt and shows her work at Foster/ White Gallery in Seattle. www.cameronannemason.com
Donna McCord ANUNADA Blown glass, silver, crow, calendula 2013 10.5 x 6.5 x 6.5
$
365
233
Donna McCord has been making her artwork and teaching glassblowing within the Pratt community since 2003. The series “The Space Inside Between You and Me” is a study on how our relationships are internal reflections of our collected mind, body and spirit experience. Each vessel is an abstraction on a Buddha figure in seated meditation, and are made with found objects that are collected while contemplating a certain time, place or personal relationship in her life. “Anunada” means sound, and it is the most recent piece in this series.
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Cameron Anne Mason
www.mccordglass.com
IRRIGATION STUDY 1 Encaustic and graphite 24 x 18 x 2
$
400
234
Jo Moniz’ current series evolved from a visual interest in the irrigation circles dotting farmlands as viewed from the air. The geometry of roads, fence lines, and circles imposed on the land are broken by natural features creating obstacles in the man-made pattern. In “Irrigation Study 1” thin hot encaustic pigment is applied to rice paper, inscribed with a loose graphite geometric pattern. The work evolves through the layering of pigment and line. Jo Moniz is a Seattle artist and architect. Her work was recently featured at SAM Gallery and Rentals as part of the 2013 New Introductions show.
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Jo Moniz
www.jomoniz.com
DOWNTOWN JAZZ Cast bronze 2013 10 x 10 x 5
$
500
PA G E
40
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
235
This sculpture was made using the evaporative foam casting method (EVF). The original piece was created with shaped pieces of styrofoam glued together, then tightly packed in a barrel of sand. Molten bronze is poured into the foam patter, instantly vaporizing it and solidifying it. Sprues are removed and patina applied. This casting was from a series about urban stimuli.
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Alex Montgomery
Linocut and mixed media 2013 15 x 24 x 2
$
300
www.lesliemoon.wordpress.com
Encaustic, wax, oil and pencil 2013 36 x 36
1,300
$
Terri Roush UNTITLED Vitrograph kilnformed glass 2013 17 x 7 x .4
$
550
Stacy Frost CHAIN, CHAIN, CHAIN Borosilicate glass 2013 18 inches long
$
650
238
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Terri has been working with glass for the past five years studying fusing and casting at Pratt. Recently, she had the opportunity to study at Bullseye with Nathan Sandberg learning the technique used in this piece. Terri, a native Nebraskan, currently lives and works on Lopez Island with her husband and two small children. She loves the look of murini cane she pulled from her vitrograph kiln as it visually resembles for her the interior rings of trees.
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THE COLOR TESTS THAT FINALLY WORKED
237
“TCTTFW” is basically one big test. It is an attempt to transfer and re-assemble the color tests and sketches from Malorie’s sketch book into one cohesive piece. With bare wood, heavy cording, pouring, drawing, drips and tool marks she was aiming for an “industrial encaustic” look. The basis of her images and colors are from her younger years in Japan and later years in Montana, falling in love with fields, orchards and gardens, and her years at the University of Washington, where she earned her MFA.
239
Stacy Frost has been working in glass since 2004 and has been an instructor at Pratt for the past six years. This necklace is part of a series that contains glass beads meant to look like they are made from other materials or could be objects found in nature.
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Malorie Lacitis
2 S IL ENT AU C TI O N
MAD TEA PARTY
236
Ever since graduating from the University of the Arts with a BFA in printmaking and book arts, Leslie Nan Moon’s heart remains that of a printmaker. Leslie’s Art is narrative and she tends to work in series. Alice in Wonderland, The Wizard of Oz, and Dia De Los Muertos are some of her favorite subject matters. Additionally, Leslie recently illustrated a gothic children’s book, “Agatha Hattie - Queen of the Night,” that is being sold on Amazon.com.
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Leslie Nan Moon
www.stacyfrost.com
PA G E
41
PURPLE HAZE II Fused glass 2009 12 x 12
FRAGILE MIGRATION Kilnformed glass 2013 11.5 x 11.5 x 2
$
400
THE TRAVELER Encaustic, oil and etching 2013 8x8
$
400
Alma Lux UNTITLED Etching
$
500
PA G E
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
241
This work reflects Susanne Ratcliffe Wilson’s concern for the vulnerability of migrating birds. She has been entranced by Sandhill cranes for the last seven years. During her summers in Homer, Alaska, breeding grounds for Sandhill cranes, she took hundreds of photographs and later translate images of birds, marine mammals and landscapes into kiln-formed glass using glass powders and sheet glass, a technique from Catherine Newell at Pilchuck Glass School. Before she moved to Seattle her work had been juried into the Alaska state-wide biennial exhibit, “Earth, Fire & Fiber” in November 2011.
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Susanne Ratcliffe Wilson
Carol Ross
42
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400
242
This painting was inspired by the Exvotos of Mexico, while Carol was working with Maestro Enrique Flores in Oaxaca, at a Pratt Workshop, led by Kamla Kakaria. “Exvotos” are offerings of thanks. This painting is an offering of ‘thanks’ to her hard working husband and all the men that travel for work and come home exhausted. Carol works in oil, print and encaustic, blending the mediums into timeless narrations. Storytelling is a vital element of Carol’s work. Each layer of paint must dry and be refined before the encaustic wax can be applied.
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$
240
Robin Oakes has been working with glass for 30 years. She enjoys working with many forms of glass. This piece is part of her “Purple” series.
243
Alma Lux was born in Etla, Oaxaca, she studied at CEDART Miguel Cabrera in Oaxaca, Colegio Americano de Fotografia, Centro Fotografico Alvarez Bravo, El CASA, Academia de San Carlos, Taller Rufino Tamayo, Escuela de Bellas artes de la UABJO and Benito Juarez University in Oaxaca with Shinzabaro Takeda. This etching titled Nihilum is a Latin word meaning empty it is about leaving the material world to touch the cosmos.
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2
Robin Oakes
600
Andrew Horch SWIRL VASE Glass 2013
550
Iris Guy BRANCH NECKLACE AND TEARDROP EARRINGS Jewelry 2013 16; 1.25 x .5
$
300
AJ Power GAYNAAKO HERDER Oil on Panel 2009 15 x 36
$
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“How do you know I’m mad?” said Alice. “You must be,” said the Cat, or you wouldn’t have come here.”
246
247
Simple, contemporary, and lightweight, Iris’ jewelry collection offers something for everyone. Each piece is hand made in her Seattle based studio, culled from unspoken desires and organic forms, playful rock shapes, and architectural forms - in silver and 18k gold. Iris Guy studied conceptual design at the renowned Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Jerusalem, Israel. In the Pacific northwest her jewelry can be found at the Seattle Art Museum, Bellevue Art Museum, Tacoma Art Museum, and IMA Gallery. She also has work at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art and the Israel Museum Jerusalem, Israel.
www.ajpowerstudio.com
900
Shirley Sing UNTITLED Mixed on Canvas 36 x 24 x 1.5
$
400
248
This portrait of Etienne Cakpo is a reminder of the love we have for our children and the hope that they will always be safe. Layers of paint as well as pumice and talc create textural effects and reflect light in this piece. Shirley would like to dedicate the painting to Mr. Pratt and his unending hopes and dreams for us all.
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$
245
2 S IL ENT AU C TI O N
$
“Oh, you can’t help that,” said the Cat: “we’re all mad here. I’m mad. You’re mad.”
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Scullpted Glass, Mixed Media 2013 7.5 x 10 x 1
“But I don’t want to go among mad people,” Alice remarked.
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ONYX
244
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Sasha TepperStewart
PA G E
43
MONTERSAAT Goache on paper 1998 20 x 24
850
$
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www.maryann-peters.com
CANYON TWILIGHT
380
$
BULL, THE QUIET ONE
850
$
Mary-Melinda Wellsandt DELICATE LEAF IN FOG Glass 2013
$
500
PA G E
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
250
ITEM
“After the excitement of the whitewater, the raft drifted into the expanse of Ruby Canyon at sunset. At first glance, the shadows on rocky walls are muted blues and purples, but closer examination reveals the details of the rock strata.” The glass beads in this piece have been acid etched to create the appearance of rocks softened and shaped by the river. Donna Prunkard is a cell biologist by day and a glass artisan at night. She instructs at Pratt Fine Arts Center and loves being part of a student’s first experience with molten glass.
251
Bull, the Quiet One is from a series of several bulls painted in 2010 - 2012. The bulls represent a distinct sensation at that the time that life, beautiful and powerful as it can be, was trying and that learning to hold on and maintain some sort of balanced equilibrium was the goal. The quiet one was drawn at the moment things shifted and the artist’s internal life quieted. It was the calm after the storm, the moment of stillness made more still and more quiet by the previous intense exertion.
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Donna Prunkard
Ruthie V.
44
249
Mary Ann Peters received a BA in Printmaking from the University of California and a MFA from the University of Washington in Painting and Drawing. Her 2D work has been featured in one and two person shows at the Edmonds Community College, and James Harris Gallery of Seattle. Recent group shows at the James Harris Gallery have also featured Mary’s work, as did the Northwest Biennial and the Decade of Excellence Neddy Artist Fellowship shows at the Tacoma Art Museum. Mary has been a guest lecturer at the Universidad Nacional Automonoma de Mexico and the University of Puget Sound as well as an instructor in painting and drawing at the University of Washington.
252
“I have been making ‘pretty’ things since age three, painting the gravel from our driveway with watercolors and peddling it around the block to our neighbors. Over the yeasr my work has become more refined and sophisticated but I have retained my three-yearold sense of joy and delight in the creation of these pieces.” Mary-Melinda Wellsandt’s work uses functional glass as a surface to explore. The process includes the use of a sandblaster to carve, permanent paints, enamels and other assorted mixed media to render her original drawings, photos, and paintings in a very unique and clearly “high-touch” way.
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2
Mary Ann Peters
Etching and chine colle 2013
700
$
www.davidsongalleries.com
SOME NIGHTSS Blown glass 2013 12 x 8
$
450
Colleen E. Monette HIVE Encaustic, plaster and collage 2012 10 x 10
$
400
254
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First-generation Norwegian/American, Seattle native, her work is an extension of growth as an Artist. Bringing together passion for historical time-frames and culture to create contemporary functional/sculptural art. Using an array of techniques from fusing flat glass, casting, lamp-working, etching, and favorite, blown glass. Daughter to an Alaskan King Crabber, influences can also be reflected in her hand-blown vessels, as also the love of clothing design seen in her line of hats, making her a Millenary glass artist. She has a BFA in Graphic Design/Sculpture from PLU, a BA in Fashion Marketing & Design from WWU, and an apprenticeship in B.C. paired with Pilchuck in 1992.
255
Hive, encaustic mixed media, reflects Colleen’s concern with the recent massive die-off of the honeybee. Combining plaster, wax and collage elements, this work carries the warmth of the hive, while opening a dialog to their plight. Colleen Monette lives and works in Walla Walla, WA, where she is involved with the arts community, teaching encaustic to adults as well as art to K-5 through Carnegie Picture Lab, and participating in juried shows throughout the Northwest.
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Dianne Rasmussen
2 S IL ENT AU C TI O N
SWIRL VASE
253
Van Someren holds a MFA in Printmaking from the University of Washington. She is currently the Instructional Technician in Printmaking, Fibers, Painting, Drawing and IVA at the University of Washington. She is also an instructor in Etching at the Pratt Fine Arts Center and Kirkland Arts Center. Van Someren has exhibited locally and nationally; her work included in several collections including the New York Public Library, the University of Iowa, the University of Washington and Yale University’s Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library. She is represented locally by Davidson Galleries.
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Kim Van Someren
www.colleenemonette.com
CHERRY BLOSSOM Pate de verre, glass and wood 2013 9 x 11 x 1
$
650
256
Katie Miller received her BFA from the University of Washington and her MFA from Tyler School of Art. Katie’s installations and sculptures incorporate a variety of materials including glass, metal, fibers, beeswax, photography, found objects, sound, and video. Her work touches on a variety of subjects, but recently she has been creating environments and situations that investigate social relation and community dynamics. Her work is exhibited nationally as well as in Europe.
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Katie Miller
www.millerkatie.com PA G E
45
DOC SIZE: 8.5"w X 11"h
Nintendo is proud to support
The Mad Pratter Art Auction For Pratt Fine Arts Center
Š 2013 Nintendo.
DESIGNER: Mia Brooks
-Low resolution PDF, NOT FOR PRINT
NT
silent
auction
THREE C
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6:45 pm
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$
450
Tia Kramer SWOON BROOCH Handmade paper and oxidized sterling silver 2012 2 x 2 x 1.5
$
358
Carolina Andersson FLOWERS, EARRINGS AND PENDANT Sterling silver and 24k gold 2011 Earrings are 50mm long x 18mm wide, Pendant is 18in long x 35mm wide. Set of two
$
450
Gregor Jamroski SONNENBLUMEN Gelatin silver print 2012 18 x 24
1,200
$
301
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Tia Kramer is a sound and sculpture artist who crafts adornments with sterling silver, gold, and handmade paper. Tia creates her distinctive papers using Philippine plant fibers that are treated to protect from water and abrasion. Falling Months and Amplitude are from a new series that document circling, passing time. Layered organic spheres make visual representations of accumulating time. Tia Kramer studied at the School of the art Institute of Chicago and Macalester College. You can find her jewelry nationally at galleries and museum stores including the Museum of the Art Institute of Chicago and the Seattle Art Museum.
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Watercolor and ink 2011 12 x 36
302
Carolina has been making jewelry for many years now and she is still in love with the process of making jewelry in silver and gold. Her preferred technique is Keum Boo, an ancient Korean gilding technique where pure gold is diffusion-bonded to silver-depleted sterling. Carolina currently shows and sells her jewelry at Velvet da Vinci Gallery in San Francisco, CA, at Ragazzi’s Flying Shuttle in Pioneer Square, at Kobo, in the International District and Capitol Hill, and at Danaca Design in the University District in Seattle. All of Carolina’s jewelry is fabricated by hand and hand-finished.
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LONG STREETS
300
“Long Streets” is part of a series exploring urban life, its organizational structure, and blending of cultures. Jan’s Finnish heritage and love of Japanese art inspire this painting. Jan was a recipient of the Vascovitz Scholarship ain Drawing and Painting at Pratt. She has been in numerous solo and group shows locally including exhibits at the Kirkland Public Library. Overlake Hospital, and the EAFA Gallery at the Seattle Design Center.
303
Gregor Jamroski studied ceramics at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. His works are exhibited throughout the Northwest and he was a 2012 finalist in the Priz de la Photografie, Paris. Jamroski embraces a Wabi Sabi inspired aesthetic of decay, regeneration and imperfection. A book of recent photographs will be published later this year under the Eidelauer imprint. This photograph from the series Sonnenblumen documents the life cycle of a sunflower over the course of a year, and was shot with doublestacked Poloroid 55 film.
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Jan Tervonen
jamroskiphoto.info
PA G E
48
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
Borosilicate glass 2013
850
$
www.justinbagley.com
ANEMONE BOWL Kilnformed glass 2012 16 diameter
$
350
305
Tiffany Thiele has been working in fused glass for 8 years in her Pioneer Square studio. For the past two summers, Tiffany has studied with master glass artist Bob Leatherbarrow. The “Anemone Bowl” is a result of her time spent learning in the Leatherbarrow studio. Created from a combination of powdered glass that is carved, as well as iridized sheet glass, the bowl is reminiscent of a sea anemone under water. You can find more of Tiffany’s work at the Seattle Art Museum Shop, and at the gallery Venue, in Ballard.
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Tiffany Thiele
3 S IL ENT AU C TI O N
DNA COIL
304
Justin Bagley has been working with glass since 1999. He has studied alongside various artists around the United States and the world. He in turn shares his knowledge by teaching various classes at Pratt Fine Arts Center. Justin is infinitely intrigued by the glass medium and actively participates in the flameworking community.
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Justin Bagley
tiffanynoel.blogspot.com
LADY IN BLUE Cast glass 2013 6.5 x 8.5 x 3
$
900
Jon Moreno MEMORY GIFT Blown & sculpted soft glass 2013 7 x 15 x 5.5
$
400
306
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Michael has been an active participant at Pratt Fine Arts Center continuously for the past six years. Fascinated with all forms of glass; blowing, sculpting, kiln casting, fusing, his main focus throughout has been hot sand casting. This particular pieces is the first of a recent series playing with the human form via creating a “negative” in glass. The actual image is suggested but not “there”. In this case, the female form was sculpted in the sand using a rough “negative” mold, followed by hand touch-up and shaping, prior to the hot glass pour.
307
Jon Moreno is a Seattle taught glassworker, originally from Northern California, Indiana and New Mexico. He has been working with glass as his main artistic medium for nine years, and is currently a professional glassblower for many independent Seattle artists. This piece is the first in a brand new series inspired by memories of relationships from his family, friends and loved ones. It’s donation was inspired by the generosity shown to the artists by Pratt as an institution and harbor for creativity.
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Michael Drake
PA G E
49
PRECESSION Monoprint 2012 22 x 17
1,200
$
308
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Deanne Belinoff has had several full NEA grants and GAP grants. Her work is in national collections, including the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the King County portable collection. She is represented by Augen Gallery in Portland Oregon and Francie Kelley Gallery in Los Angeles. Although her work can be related to reductivist traditions paying homage to concepts found in geometric abstraction. She has a personal and meditative drive behind her worka curiosity and about the meaning of life/death/ eternity. She shares this interest in the juncture of infinite with the finite with many astronomers.
Marita Dingus SITTING GLASS CHILD Glass and fabric 2008 22 x 23 x 14
1,000
$
Robert Burch AQUA FRACTURE Glass 2012 18 x 9 x 5
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www.deannebelinoff.com
309
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3
Deanne Belinoff
310
Marita Dingus makes mixed-media sculpture out of discarded material. With an MFA from San Jose State University, Marita has had national and international exhibits and received numerous awards including an Artist Trust Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship. Her work is included in the collections of the Seattle Art Museum, Microsoft, Safeco, Swedish Hospital, Harborview Medical Center, the King County Arts Commission, the Seattle Arts Commission, the Washington State Commission and the Tacoma Art Museum.
www.robertgburch.com
800
$
THE STREET BELOW Oil on panel 2011 17 x 17 x 1.5
$
500
311
“Sipping port on a rooftop deck, across from Purto, Portugal, we overlooked this view of rooftops and the street below. The light and shadows, shapes and textures inspired me to snap the photograph that became the inspiration for this painting.” Travel is only one of the inspirations for Layne’s work. She sees paintings everywhere - in cow pastures, jazz clubs and sailboat regattas - and places between. Her work is represented in Seattle by Alki Arts Gallery and Community Artists Program, and in Carmel, California by Edward Montgomery Fine Arts Gallery.
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Layne Cook
www.laynecook.com
PA G E
50
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
Acrylic on canvas 2012 32 x 32
1,100
$
www.swansangha.com
Sterling silver and pearls 2012 38 inch chain
$
380
Andrea & Brian Mazrim PACIFIC SEA VASE Glass, blown, carved and sandblasted 2012 4.5 x 9 x 9
1,025
$
Hong Hoang CLOUD NECKLACE AND EARRINGS Sterling silver and gold filled wire 2013 Necklace: 23 long, Earrings: 1.5 diameter Set of two
$
315
314
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After moving to Seattle in 2001, Andrea and Brian Mazrim began learning the art of blowing glass. Brian is a forensic pathologist, whose experience and artistic family have helped influence and shape his artistic vision. Andrea works as a glass blower and as an assistant to several local artists. Their work together in the studio is collaborative in all stages of design and production. Recently they have been experimenting with carving glass, both before and after the final shaping of the piece. The “Pacific Sea Vase” attempts to bring the surface texture of a natural object to a man-made form and matter.
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GRASS WITH BERRIES
313
As a past board member and instructor, Pratt has been an important part of Micki Lippe’s artistic life for a long time. She is a member of a women’s group that hikes or crosscountry skis once a week. The woods of the northwest have come to inform her work. The inspiration for this necklace is the berries and grasses that one sees while walking along the trail. With an art degree from Washington University in St. Louis, Micki has had her work shown all over the world and had articles in major publications. She received a Distinguished Alumni Award from WU in 2011.
315
Hong Hoang believes that creativity is in all of us and that Pratt provides a great environment that fosters that need to create. Hong has taken several classes at Pratt, mostly in Jewelry/ Metalsmithing and has learned something new in every class. Hong has also participated in the Alki Fair for 3 years, as a juried artist. For this necklace and earring set, Hong wanted to create something that was light and wearable, but still had elements of substance and design. Like the ever present clouds of the Northwest, the individual pieces move and change shape, depending on how the pieces shift.
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Micki Lippe
3 S IL ENT AU C TI O N
PORTRAIT OF KARA WALKER
312
This work is one of an ongoing series of portraits entitled Emerging Artists, which depicts past and contemporary artists as if peering blindly from behind a two-way mirror. Chameleons, camouflage, forests, jungles, thickets, brambles, and woven tapestries inspire the work. Constructed atop a magic square, the fabric of the image is woven from equal parts figure and environment. The square creates a balanced, open, unbounded, spacious environment and serves to enforce the quality of textiles. The work takes responsibility for something that goes unseen on the surface - interdependence, both ecological and spiritual. Giustin paints in near darkness.
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Guistin M. Durall
PA G E
51
THREE BEASTS Kiln casted glass 2012 6 x 3 x .5
1,200
$
Anne Randall THE BOX STATEMENT Oxidized sterling silver 2013 20 inch necklace of adjustable .75 inch square boxes
$
350
316
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Sherri is a local Seattle artist drawn to narrative. Growing up in the woods of the southeast evoked imagination beyond the immediate. Texture is the undercurrent of her work, as each form and surface creates a story of its own. Living in the Pacific Northwest since 1996 has added another layer of appreciation of nature. Exploring the dark forests and open fields with her dogs grounds and inspires her. Her three golden retrievers inspired her to create the “Three Beasts” series of kiln casted glass vessels. Capturing both the memory of the crow and canine and transforming the bone into glass is the cause. Glass illuminates the marks and etch of teeth and texture. Functioning as culinary ware, they pay homage to the first beast (the cow that the bone came from. These are made from lead-free glass and serve a variety of functions. They make great drinking vessels or gourmet salt cellars!
317
Boxes can be metaphors and often cliché ones at that. Do they endorse and protect, or contain and limit? Do surprises emerge from them or secrets hide in them? This is an existential dilemma for you to solve. But, sometimes a box is just a box, and these little shapes are lined up to be just what you want them to be. Artist Anne Randall has fabricated this necklace for the Pratt auction in honor of the art center’s identity as a place to make art in both literal and figurative ways.
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Sherri Gamble
www.sorrisettidesigns.net
FACET EARRINGS Jewelry 2013 1.75 x 1.25 x .25
$
300
Linda Beaumont SKUNK CABBAGE Silkscren/paper 2011 32 x 24
1,000
$
318
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Maru Almeida was born and raised in Mexico surrounded by a rich silver smithing tradition. Her interest as an artist has been mainly focused on the ideas of wearability and tactile experience. Non-traditional materials have also led her to an exploration of various techniques which she incorporates into one-of-a-kind pieces. She received her BFA from the University of Texas at El Paso and her MFA from the University of Oregon. Maru has been working as a professional jeweler a decade now and has taught at several institutions including the University of Oregon and Seattle University.
319
The arc of her works, from intimate drawings and paintings into large scale installations of public artworks, share many of the same sources of inspiration. There is a visceral, transformative journey of the making that charges the work, and the sense of hand that is always present within the work. The images reveal themselves slowly... she wants her paintings to breathe, and public installations to make a space sing.
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Maru Almeida
www.lindabeaumont.com
PA G E
52
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
Blown Glass 2009 12 x 12 x 12
1,100
$
Jite Agbro PARTICULATE Wax paper and thread 2012 30 x 36
1,200
$
321
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Jite Agbro has worked as an artist for over fourteen years. Her main medium is printmaking, though she works across a variety of mediums including oil, acrylic, encaustic, textile, and metal. Known for the experimental aspects of her work, she continues to push the boundaries of works on paper by combining materials and techniques. “I have explored many themes in the intervening years but the visual impact of written language continues to be a constant in my work. Graffiti, pictographs, illuminated manuscripts - all of these forms of embellished communication are a common thread in all my work.” - Jite Agbro
3 S IL ENT AU C TI O N
SOFT CUBE
320
Courtney Branam’s vessels are influenced and inspired as much from the history of glassblowing as from personal experiences working with modern artists. Rooted in a tradition that is meticulously on center, Courtney adds a modern twist that allows the work to become gestural and expressive. Courtney Branam was born and raised in Houston, TX. While studying engineering and graphic design at Texas Tech University, he discovered his passion for blowing glass. Since graduating with a Bachelor of Arts, Courtney has traveled from Alaska to Australiaand parts in between- practicing his craft. He currently lives in Seattle and has worked as a freelance glass blower in numerous studios.
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Courtney Branam
LITTLE MIDDEN Glass
850
$
Sasah Gascoigne MAD PRATTER HAT RING Jewelry
$
500
322
“Be what you would seem to be - or, if you’d like it put more simply - never imagine yourself not to be otherwise than what it might appear to others that what you were or might have been was not otherwise than what you had been would have appeared to them to be otherwise.”
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Rebecca Chernow
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www.jiteagbro.com
323
“I wonder if I’ve been changed in the night. Let me think. Was I the same when I got up this morning? I almost think I can remember feeling a little different. But if I’m not the same, the next question is ‘Who in the world am I?’ Ah, that’s the great puzzle!”
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1,500
$
David Clark BELL FLEUR 3D 2013 16 x 10 x 10
1,500
$
Lisa Hasegawa HEAVEN Letterpress, eau de graph 2012 10 x 7
$
300
Ellen Harbison PURPLE TIGER Glass lampwork beads 2010 Set of three
$
450
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Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
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324
“It was much pleasanter at home,” thought poor Alice, “when one wasn’t always growing larger and smaller, and being ordered about by mice and rabbits. I almost wish I hadn’t gone down the rabbit-hole--and yet--and yet--...”
325
Bell Fleur is a steel bell with gold leaf petals and a bronze stamen acting as the ringer. The bell rings in E with harmonics in A, C, F, & G. David Clark is the sculpture studio technician at Pratt and has been working with metal for nearly 40 years. His work is influenced by years spent in Asia and a deep love of nature. David’s sculpture and photography are in private collections in the US and Europe.
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Glass 2013 19 x 9.5 x 5
326
Lisa Hasegawa usually works with letterpress, artists books, and sewing techniques on paper. The clouds in this piece were printed using hand set rule (lead strips used to print lines) and a new method called, “eau de graph,” which allows multiple colors to be letterpress printed at once. Lisa has been teaching letterpress at Pratt since 2005 and won instructor of the year in printmaking in 2007. She also teaches bookmaking classes and won a Larry Sommers Fellowship Merit Award in 2010.
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GIRASOLE
327
This necklace, bracelet, and earrings set is made with smaller lampworked glass beads using Italian soft glass, with some rare glass blowing glass from Zimmerman. The sterling silver chain weaves across the spaces between the beads. Ellen has been making beads for eight years, originally learning to make beads at Pratt, to now being an Instructor.
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3
Mikey Cozza
Wax and ink on 1950’s Atlas pages 2012 34 x 49
$
900
www.adele55.com
BOWL NUMBER 24 Brass, copper and walnut 2001 8 x 7.75 x 8.75
$
3,000
329
The conceptual focus of Catherine Grisez’s work changes and evolves but is ultimately tied to a search for personal and spiritual growth. Environment as well as societal issues and ideas influence this personal narrative. Abstracted references to natural imagery are used when they capture the feelings inherent to the experiences being explored. Born and raised in Ohio, Grisez now resides in Seattle, WA. She earned a BFA from Rhode Island School of Design where she majored in Jewelry and Light Metals. Her artwork spans from limited edition and one-of-a-kind jewelry to both small and large scale sculptures.
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Catherine Grisez
3 S IL ENT AU C TI O N
LARGE NEST ON ATLAS MAPS
328
Adele Eustis’ recent series began with drawing a robin’s nest which had fallen on the ground. While nests are marvelous and resourceful structures, their potency may lie in feelings of comfort, security, and refuge. This next ink drawing is painted with wax onto book pages from a 1950s World Atlas, which are faintly visible through the ink. It is curious how nests are timeless, knowing no borders. Adele Eustis is a Seattle artists who works in both 2 and 3D. Her work has been exhibited in the Tacoma Art Museum, Storefronts Tacoma, Winthrop Gallery and Confluence Gallery in the Methow Valley, Room 104, and Shift Collaborative Studio in Seattle. Recognition includes PONCHO scholarship award, full fellowship residency to Vermont Studio Center, Kent Centennial Center Exhibition and Purchase award, Spaceworks Tacoma installation award, Best of Show EAFA, and Best of Show Frank Tobey Jones.
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Adele Eustis
www.catherinegrisez.com
Custom Letterpress Printed Holiday Cards
1,000
$
330
In consultation with Pratt’s Letterpress Studio designers and printers, you will create a custom letterpress printed holiday card (up to 200 quantity) in time for this year’s holiday mailing. The printing and finishing will happen in Pratt’s Letterpress Studio on an agreed upon date, where a selection of fine wine and appetizers will accompany you and up to three of your friends as you learn about the 100+ year-old printing technique.
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Lisa Hasewgawa
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PASSPORT TO THE ARTS & NIGHT AT THE MARQUEEN $
600
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This exciting arts package includes:
• Two tickets to any regular season performance at On the Boards. Tickets are redeemable at the On the Boards box office. • Cornish College of the Arts “Passport to the Arts” which includes two tickets to all Cornish performances for one year (some restrictions may apply). www.marqueen.com www.ontheboards.org www.cornish.edu/events
Private Shopping Party
$
400
Jesse Kelly PEAR LUSTER Blown and sculpted glass 30 x 12
1,400
$
PA G E
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
332
Click! Design that Fits is a contemporary boutique located in the vibrant West Seattle Junction. Entering Click! sets in motion a modern shopping experience that is social, unexpected and fresh. You’ll find objects of modern beauty, local jewelry, sassy handbags, miraculous organizing tools and gift solutions for just about everyone you know. We look forward to hosting a party for you and your friends! This party package includes a 2 hour evening event for groups ranging in size from 12 to 50 guests.
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Click! Design that Fits PRIVATE PARTY FOR 50
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• A gift certificate for a one-night stay for two adults in a deluxe room at the MarQueen Hotel in Seattle. Also included are valet parking and a $50 gift certificate to the Tin Lizzie Lounge. Must be scheduled before 12.30.2013, some restrictions may apply.
333
Jesse Kelly has worked with glass for 18 years: it is a passion and a career. He enjoys the simplicity of the fruit form and creating objects that inspire love and fertility.
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Season of the Arts
Tom Kundig Collection Knocker $
305
Myra Kaha UNTITLED Ceramic 2010
$
650
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3 S IL ENT AU C TI O N
1,000
$
336
The Tom Kundig Collection is a steel accessory line focused on intimately scaled hardware components. Each piece celebrates the moments when people become kinetically involved with the buildings and spaces they inhabit. They stand as a tribute to the beauty and pragmatism of nature, from the raw materials we use to build to the way the human body is designed to move - the rational and the poetic. This collection is a low-tech approach to hardware that provides an unpretentious yet tactile encounter with the built environment - a wink and a nod to elements that might otherwise be overly stylized or precious.
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CATERED YACHTING EXPERIENCE
334
You and six of your friends will join Captain Jim Spady and First Mate Fawn Spady for a lovely afternoon on the True Love, a 57’ yacht, cruising around Puget Sound. Enjoy the idyllic views, the company of your friends, champagne, cocktails, and chef catered fare. We will depart Elliott Bay Marina on a mutually agreeable date around 3pm so we can take part in a gorgeous sunset together. Here’s to good weather!
337
Myra Kaha is a Seattle based ceramic artist interested in structure and narrative. She is equally inspired by Moorish fortification architecture and Marcel Duchamp’s Etant donnés. Myra holds a MFA from West Virginia University and a BFA from Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. She currently works at Pratt as the Youth and Education Associate.
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Jim and Fawn Spady
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BUCKSHOT Oil & enamel on canvas 2011 48 x 48
1,500
$
Fulgencio Lazo LA BICICLETTA AZUL (BLUE BICYCLE) Acrylic on canvas 2013 39.5 x 31.5 x 1.5
$
3,100
PA G E
58
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
339
ITEM
Eric Swangstu’s paintings are perceptually-based, formal meditations on found objects and portraiture. His subjects include people in his life, the occasional landscape and objects that hold personal meaning. Swangstu consistently uses classical painting methods as a means of undermining the tradition of object painting from the inside out. The resulting work is often re-contextualized through a veneer of abstract and experimental techniques. Helen Harrison, critic for the New York Times, has written of his paintings as, “an effective strategy for testing the boundary between objectivity and invention.” Swangstu participated as a member in Mel Chin’s artist collective, the GALA Committee, in the late 90’s for the project In the Name of the Place, where the artist group conducted a conceptually-based, public art project on the set of the television show, Melrose Place. Historically, this is considered the first public art project to use prime-time television as a venue. His artwork is included in the permanent collections of Government Employees Hospital Association, Kansas City, MO and the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
340
Fulgencio Lazo studied under Maestro Shinzaburo Takeda at the Fine Arts School in Oaxaca, graduating in 1989. Trained as a print maker, Lazo works predominately with acrylics on canvas in his studios in Seattle and Oaxaca, Mexico. He has had over 40 solo shows throughout the US, Mexico, Japan and France, and has numerous pieces in public collections. He is a longtime board member of Seattle Print Arts.
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Eric Swangstu
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7:15 pm
RUTHIE
Sintra print 2013 40 x 28
$
JUROR’S
CHOICE
475
1
This print is one from a body of work that Jan Branham is currently developing called Ansisters. The females that are portrayed in her prints are derived from images in small snapshots. These photos were stored in a box by her mother that she inherited after her death. Some of the photos were labeled, some were not, but she knows that these are women from her family; grandmothers, aunts, cousins, second cousins, third cousins, close family friends, relatives by marriage – her Ansisters.
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Jan Branham
The series that she is working on consists of different printmaking techniques that include etching, linocut printing, serigraphy, collagraphy, monoprinting and a combination of techniques. Jan credits Pratt and its instructors and fellow students for facilitating her vision, teaching her techniques, enhancing her style, and inspiring her in her printmaking pursuits.
Sarah Loertscher STRUCTURE EARRINGS #8
18k vermeil 2013 3x1x1
$
460
2
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These earrings came out of a collaboration with Angel Sanchez, a NYbased designer. They debuted at Angel’s runway show at New York Fashion Week in February. www.sarahloertscher.com
Kamla Kakaria UNTITLED
Mixed media encaustic 2012 Set of three
$
3
450
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Kamla Kakaria received her MFA in printmaking from the University of Washington. Pratt’s Print & 2D Studio Manager, she also teaches at Kirkland Arts Center and Northwest Encaustic Studio. Kamla’s work has been exhibited in Seattle area galleries including Shift, Kirkland Arts Center Gallery and SAM Gallery.
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62
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
BABY BUDDHA HANDS
Kiln-cast lead crystal 2011 2.5 x 2.5 x 5
$
600
4
ITEM
Susan Balshor was a long-time instructor of mold-making and kiln casting at Pratt as well as an active member of the Education Committee. She also attended many sessions as student, staff, and instructor at Pilchuck Glass School. Her work was included in Corning’s New Glass Review in 2009 and Bullseye Emerge in 2008. In addition to her love of art, Susan had a deep love of music and was an avid dancer. She cofounded the Valse Cafe Orchestra and started The Masquerade at Century Ballroom. She passed away suddenly from complications of the influenza virus on Wednesday, January 23, 2013.
Cheryl Matson
Glass 2013
UNTITLED
$
1,150
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Susan Balshor
JUROR’S
CHOICE
5
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This one-of-a-kind necklace is made of over 175 flame worked glass beads, using recycled beer bottles from the Pratt Fine Arts Center 25th Anniversary Auction. The metallic shine was created by rolling the hot beads in powdered metallic glass. The beads were then woven together for a spectacular presentation of a wearable piece of art. Cheryl is a frequent instructor at Pratt, and is the Warm Shop Coordinator.
Flora Mace & Joey Kirkpatrick
1,500
$
STUDIO VISIT
6
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A catered dinner for 10 at the studio of artists Flora Mace and Joey Kirkpatrick. Flora and Joey have been collaborating for 34 years and their work includes blown and cast glass, fabricated wood and glass, glass sculpture, bronze work and paintings. Dinner provided by April James, the Downtown Personal Chef. Evening hosted by Walt and Pat Riehl. Priceless.
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UNDER CURRENT (VOYAGER SERIES)
Wood, oil, boat resin, mirror & steel 2012 12” x 12”
1,200
$
7
For Steve, the image of the boat symbolizes a voyage or journey, perhaps it is the voyage to the other side or the journey in to the unknown.
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Steve Jensen
Greg Clark MACCHIATO BOWL
Glass 2013 4 x 16 x 24
JUROR’S
CHOICE
1,900
$
8
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A Seattle native, Greg Clark found his passion for glass blowing in high school and has pursued it ever since. After attending Rhode Island School of Design and the U of W, Greg worked for Resolute making lighting for various artists in Seattle. He now runs his own studio, Fifty Four Sixteen, in Ballard, and has a line of production work under the name “Decicio Glass.” Greg has studied, worked, taught and is currently on the board at Pratt Fine Arts Center. www.decicioglass.com
Anna Skibska SPRING DEW
Glass 2013 9 x 9 x 26
$
9T
600
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his work is one of Anna Skibska’s signature forms - an explosion of color and light, made material. Skibska’s sculptures are informed by architectural concepts and capture light, play with shadow, and create spaces using diaphanous material, mostly glass. Skibska conceived this dual starburst with a special optimism in mind, an abstract invocation of new opportunities and collaborative bursts of energy in the new year. She found it a fitting donation to Pratt’s Fine Art Auction, a Pratt Fine Arts Center helps ignite new ideas and collaborations between teachers, students, and established artists. Skibska’s work as been exhibited in museums internationally. www.annaskibska.com
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64
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
CHOCHIN (DAROMA)
Blown Glass 2012 18 x 11 x 11
$
3,400
10
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Scott has been working with hot glass for 25 years. After completing his BFA at the Appalachian Center for Crafts he moved to Seattle and worked as an assistant for many different artists. Scott also worked as the Hot Shop Coordinator at Pilchuck Glass School for 7 summers. After nearly 10 years in Seattle, he spent 4 years in Japan as Associate Professor at the Toyama City Institute of Glass Art. The inspiration for my design comes from the Japanese Chochin (paper lantern). Traditionally, in Japan, Chochin can be found hanging outside of temples, places of business, or at restaurants and festivals to tell potential customers what is being offered. Many have simple graphics or lettering with names of food (ramen), character from culture (Daruma), or simple words of wisdom (beware of fire in your house!). These lanterns are always a sign of hospitality and good food.
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Scott Darlington
www.scottydarlington.com
Kerstin Graudins
$
650
SCREENPRINTING ART PARTY FOR 10
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Kids from six to sixty love learning how to apply images to t-shirts, aprons and paper. The winning bidder can share the fun with nine others during this four-hour introduction to screenprinting, courtesy of Seattle painter, printmaker, sculptor and photographer Kerstin Graudins. All you need to do is show up; all paper, ink, instruction and studio equipment is included. Your Screenprinting Art Party will be scheduled for a mutually agreeable date in 2013.
Brennan Kasperzak MOUNTAIN SERIES
Glass 2012 9 x 10 x 10
$
900
12
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Brennan Kasperzak, born March 30th, 1982 began his education at Maumee Valley, in Toledo Ohio, and left after freshman year of High School, to go to Proctor Academy in New Hampshire, where he pursued jewelry, photography, and forestry. Following graduation from Proctor in 2000, he attended Southern Oregon University for two years. In 2002 he began blowing glass at the Glass Axis in Columbus Ohio, and in 2003 started at OSU in the glass department. While at OSU he received travel grants that allowed him to study glass in Australia, Turkey, and many different locations in the United States. Since graduation in 2007 he has apprenticed with several artists and acted as teaching assistant at the Penland School of Crafts. In the fall of 2008 he spent four months living in Sweden studying Glass Design through the University of Kalmar. In March of 2009, he moved to Seattle, where he currently resides and pursues his own artwork. www.brennankasperzak.com
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BIG BLUE
Blown and sculpted glass 17 x 12 x 12 2008
$
2,500
13
Kelly O’Dell was captivated by glass many years ago by watching her father’s glassblowing as she grew up. Kelly’s goal in her designwork is to create a visually alluring composition of color, light, and mass. She currently works at the Pilchuck Glass School as an assistant to artist Randy Walker. In 2003 O’Dell joined the William Morris blowing team and found herself searching for a way to exhibit and refine her newfound skills. Dinosaurs became her subject and focus, due to the technical challenge they presented, as well as their significance in her life.
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Kelly O’Dell
Julie Conway VASO VOLANT
Blown & flameworked glass 2013 9x8
1,200
$
14
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Glass artist, Julie Conway is the owner and designer of Illuminata Art Glass Design LLC, a glass design studio creating functional and sculptural glass art works. Her first molten blob of glass was formed in 1997 and she never looked back. Taking every opportunity to work as an assistant to learn glassmaking from her local glass studios & studying with European glass masters, she has she has dedicated her practice to refining traditional techniques with a contemporary design aesthetic.
Joan Stuart Ross FOREST FOR THE TREES II
Encaustic and collage 2013 16 x 16 x 2
1,400
$
15
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Joan Stuart Ross taught painting and printmaking at Pratt for a long time. She also taught encaustic painting here, too. She has been working in encaustic since 1994, combining collage and an intaglio method of layering fields of color and depth. “Forest for the Trees II” was inspired by the canopy of the woods above, and by the surprising light that can be seen through the trees and their branches below. Joan exhibits her artwork consistently and maintains her Seattle studio at Ballardworks, where she is one of four founding partners.
Peggy Washburn
Encaustic 2012
PASSION AND REASON
$
16
1,500
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Peggy’s work is inspired literature and comparative mythology and has been acquired by major collections including the French National Collection, The Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas, the Ralph Lauren collection, Museo De Fotografia in Brescia, Italy and Seattle University. Along with numerous gallery shows, both nationally and internationally her work has been exhibited at the Whatcom Museum of History and Art, the Frye Art Museum, and the Museo Nazionale di Fotografia, in Brescia, Italy. Peggy is represented by the Linda Hodges Gallery in Seattle and The Rico Maresca Gallery in New York.
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66
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
FLY AWAY
Acrylic on panel 2008 24 x 18
1,600
$
17
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Form follows process as drops of paint evoke organic forms and architecture that reverberate in nature. Within a limited framework of shape, color, and pattern John Dempcy creates abstract paintings that explore the mystery and beauty inherent in the unfolding process of life. A graduate of the University of Washington, John has exhibited his work in solo and group shows throughout the county as well as in Europe. Locally, he is represented by the Grover Thurston Gallery. www.groverthurston.com
Mark Bennion UNTITLED (FRESCO #21)
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John Dempcy
Oil, plaster, paper and panel 2007 16 x 20 x 1.5
$
2,000
18
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Bennion is represented by Traver Gallery Seattle and has been showing his work in the US, Canada, Europe (London, Stockholm, Innsbruk, Paris) and Singapore since 1968. He is also represented by Wexler Gallery, Philadelphia. Bennion had his seventh solo exhibit at Traver in March 2013 and will have his sixth exhibit at Wexler in May 2013. www.markbennion.com www.travergallery.com
Jeremy Lepisto OVERLOOKING OPPORTUNITY
Kilnformed glass 2003 26 x 5 x 3
$
3,000
19
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Jeremy Lepisto is currently a studio artist and candidate for a PhD in Sculpture at the Australian National University in Canberra, Australia. He creates works that use imagery and objects inspired by his everyday surroundings to create work that explores the complex in the common and to comment on the condition of the spaces that we all share. He received his BFA in glass and metals from Alfred University in 1997. He also recently completed serving more than seven years on the Board of Directors for the Glass Art Society. www.jeremylepisto.com
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Lampworked glass 2012
UNTITLED
$
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Robert Mickelsen
1,200
20
Robert’s eyes were opened to the possibilities of glass in 1987 when he took a class from Paul Stankard. Mickelsen now exhibits work in many prestigious collections, including the Renwick Gallery of American Crafts at the Smithsonian Institution, Corning Museum of Glass, The Toledo Museum of Art, and Museum of Arts and Design. www.mickelsenstudios.com
Week In Puerto Vallarta Condominium For 6
Relax in Puerto Vallarta One week in an Ocean Front Privately owned Condo in Plazamar Sleeps 4, 2 master suites
1,200
$
21
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Plazamar in the Zona Romantica is walking distance to some of the best restaurants in Puerto Vallarta and the finest art galleries around. Puerto Vallarta is one of the safest and loveliest towns in all of Mexico. This privately owned 2 master suite condo boasts a large terrace across the full width of the condo on the fourth floor, overlooking the Pacific Ocean and the activity along the most popular beach in the city. On the rooftop, away from the crowds, you can lounge on a secluded deck by the swimming pool. At night, when it’s time to sleep, the cool ocean breeze will sweep through your unit as you rest comfortably on king-size pillowtop mattresses. Dates based on availability. See website at www.VRBO.com/19510
Boyd Sugiki MINT HIGHBALLS WITH ICE BUCKET
22
Blown glass and steel 2006 8 x 14 x 14
$
2,400
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Boyd Sugiki was first introduced to glass at Punahou High School in Honolulu, HI. He went on to receive a BFA from California College of Arts and Crafts and a MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design. His work combines innovative glass blowing techniques with a modern approach to design. Boyd has been an instructor at Pratt since 1997, and with his wife Lisa Zerkowitz, they operate Two Tone Studios in West Seattle. www.boydsugiki.com
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Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
GREEN URBANISM
Blown and wheel cut glass 2012 11 x 11 x 3
$
4,000
23
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Ethan Stern has been involved with Pratt for almost 12 years. He holds a BFA from Alfred University and currently owns a glass studio in Seattle. Stern’s piece, entitled “Green Urbanism”, is a reflection on utopian architecture and its effect on our natural surroundings. Ethan’s work is in many important private collections as well as The Museum of American Glass, the Palm Springs Art Museum and the Ebeltoft Glass Museum in Denmark. He has taught sculpture in glass at schools across the country, including Pratt Fine Arts Center, Pilchuck Glass School and the Corning Museum of Glass. www.travergallery.com www.ethanstern.com
Chuck Lopez MARMORINO
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Ethan Stern
Blown Glass 2012 14 x 18 x 3
$
5,600
24
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Originally from Denver, Colorado, Chuck Lopez started working with glass in 1989. With a background in computer science, mathematics and philosophy, he received a BA in Philosophy from the University of Colorado, and an MFA from Alfred University. Chuck has been involved with Pratt since 1999, as a staff member, instructor, teaching assistant, student and Artist in Residence. He has received grants or residencies from Pilchuck Glass School, Artists Trust, and the Creative Glass Center of America at Wheaton Arts. In addition, Chuck was a co-chair for the 2011 Glass Art Society conference in Seattle. Chuck resides in Seattle, where he continues to teach, work, and make art at Pratt.
Raven Skyriver ROCKFISH
Off hand sculpted glass 2010 24 x 18 x 9
$
6,800
25
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Born in 1982 Raven Skyriver started blowing glass in high school at the age of 16. Raven’s mentor Lark Dalton taught him how to build glass blowing equipment, and trained him in Venetian technique enabling Raven to build his own shop to work in. Soon thereafter, Raven joined the William Morris team, by Karen Willenbrink-Johnsen’s request in 2003. He worked there for the following seven years assisting Bill’s team, and continuing on with Karen, after bills retirement. Raven’s focus in the area of sculpture and his depiction of marine life is inspired by his island upbringing, and informed by the creatures that inhabit this fragile ecosystem.
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GRATITUDE
Glass and steel 2013 22.5 x 4 x 5.5
7,500
$
26
Sabrina Knowles and Jenny Pohlman began their collaboration in 1993, specifically to create a piece for Pratt’s annual auction. Little did they know that this collaboration would become the gateway to their future together and the birth of the “Hommage” series. This series represents our human connectedness and the gesture of the figures represents a pause and reflection of this connection. With this donation of “Homage” they wish to celebrate 20 years of collaboration and thank Pratt Fine Arts Center for inspiring them to begin this journey!
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Sabrina Knowles & Jenny Pohlman
Throughout their careers they have received grants, awards, residencies and scholarships. Their work has been shown and is in permanent collections of museums nationwide, and is among numerous prestigious private collections. www.pohlmanknowles.com
Jeff Crandall SPHERE OF INFLUENCE
Blown, sandblasted & acid-etched glass 2012 12 x 16 x 19
$
3,500
27
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As an independent artist, Jeff Crandall has been creating work at Pratt for 20 years. An accomplished poet, he combines his original text with glass to explore themes of human fragility, transparency, and containerization. His work has shown at over 60 galleries internationally. The full text of Eclipse reads: “Amazing how life reverses itself- how a field of ice and snow will dissolve in crocus and lilies, how a single lucky coin can turn a man into a millionaire, how two angry lovers rediscover a warm familiar kiss. And here you are- riding the wheel of fate through day and night and back again, learning how to navigate disaster and luck, the world’s shadow and light with equal grace.”
Sonja Blomdahl FLAME AQUAMARINE
Blown glass 2003 7.5 x 14
7,500
$
28
ITEM
This vessel features intriguing optics with the clear band and the concentric blue band of the top overlay color. This vessel was on loan to the U.S. Embassy in Buenos Aires, Argentina from 2006 – 2008.
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70
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
INTERIOR FOLD, VASE
Blown glass 2012 11 x 20
$
4,000
29
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Benjamin Moore was born in 1952, in Olympia, Washington. He received his BFA from California College of the Arts, and an MFA from Rhode Island School of Design. He is the recipient of an NEA Grant, an American Craft Council Fellow, and a Libensky Award recipient from 2006. His work is on display in numerous museum and private collections through the world. He was a designer at the Venini Factory, Murano-Venice, Italy, and J&L Lobmeyr, Vienna, Austria. With his over 30 year affiliation with Pilchuck Glass School, he has served as its Interim Executive Director, Artistic Director, Faculty Member, and currently serves as a member of the Board of Trustees. He is the owner of Benjamin Moore, Inc. (BMI), where he has produced his work since 1985.
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Benjamin Moore
www.benjaminmooreglass.com
Debora Moore AURORA – EPIDENDRUM GIGANTICA
Blown sculpted glass 2012 15 x 12 x 8
8,000
$
30
ITEM
Debora has been an instructor at Pilchuck, Pratt, and Tacoma’s Hilltop Artist-in-Residence Program. In 1998, she was accepted into the African American Design Archive at the Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum. Her work was included in the “Artistry of Orchids” exhibition in 2000, at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC. In 2007, she received the Rakow Commission with inclusion in the permanent collection of the Corning Museum of Glass. “By combining new techniques with traditional glass-blowing skills, my work expresses my vision of an exotic environment; one that is rooted in reality but springs from the imagination.”
www.deboramoore.com
RAISE THE PADDLE : Kathy Alvord Gerlich FUSED + SLUMPED GLASS PLATTER
See page 12 for details
Glass 2013 1 x 11.25 x 11.25
$
300
31
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Kathy Alvord Gerlich is a long-time support of Pratt Fine Arts Center. She never misses the auction and is always glad to contribute one of her glass pieces. Kathy collects both 2 and 3 dimensional art and makes fused and slumped glass dinnerware and serving pieces, as well as decorative art pieces. This year her auction piece is a 1” deep, 11.5” square block, white and dichromic glass platter. It can be used as a serving piece or displayed on a stand, or both! PA G E
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B036 IRIDESCENT
Blown glass, sterling & fine silver & hemat 2013 0.5 x 7.5 x 1
$
600
32
Kait received her BFA from Rhode Island School of Design in 1993, her MFA from Alfred University in 2001. She uses traditional Italian techniques as a base to create sculpture, vessels and jewelry. Her collections include the Seattle Art Museum, Carnegie Museum of Art, the Corning Museum of Glass, the Museum of Northwest Art, LaConner, WA, the Palm Springs Art Museum and the Shanghai Museum of Glass. She has been an instructor at Pratt Fine Arts Center off and on since 1995.
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Kait Rhoads
www.facerejewelryart.com
Anna McKee TRUNK STRATA ABSTRACTION
Collograph print 2007 35 x 23 x 1.5
1,150
$
33
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The collograph monotype “Trunk Strata Abstraction” is part of a series about the layers of memories that accumulate in the physical world. Anna searches for visual patterns in the environment, such as tree growth, soil strata and glaciers to create portraits of the land. The work is heavily influenced by scientific field research. She sketches in the city and remote environments to find stories about the deep memory, resiliency and frailty of our planet. Her work has been exhibited throughout the Northwest and has been supported by the National Science Foundation, Artist Trust and 4Culture. www.annamckee.com
Board Wine Pick
34
1,200
$
ITEM
What goes better with art than wine? Treat yourself to an assorted case of fine wines, each bottle hand-selected and contributed by a different member of Pratt’s Board of Trustees. A little something for every occasion! Visit the live auction display to peruse the selection.
PA G E
72
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
HARE SAMPLE
Encaustic 2004 18 x 12
1,200
$
35
ITEM
Calkins works with a large variety of media, from working with fabric, wood and metal to encaustics to bookmaking — keeping my sense of discovery fresh and exciting, often leaning on sketches from my notebooks that have captured important and not so important events in his life. He began exhibiting in 1994 at the MIA Gallery in Seattle, and is currently represented by the American Primitive Gallery in New York, Rice Polak in Provincetown, MA and Tanner Hill in Chattanooga, TN.
Carol Milne DESIRE
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Larry Calkins
Kiln cast lead crystal 2010 6 x 10.5 x 10.5
1,600
$
36
ITEM
“I see my knitted glass as metaphor for social structure. Individual strands are weak and brittle on their own, but deceptively strong when bound together. The connections are what bring strength and integrity to the whole.” Carol is a sculptor working primarily in glass. Her work is internationally recognized, and is included in the collections of the Notojima Glass Art Museum in Japan, and the Kamm Foundation. Upcoming shows include Fiber Arts International 2013 and Teapots! 7, both in Pittsburgh this spring. Locally her work can be seen at the Meyer Wells showroom in the Seattle Design Center and in the Bellevue Art Museum Store. www.carolmilne.com
Eva Isaksen UNDER A HORIZON
Collage on paper 2001 35.5 x 39.5
1,600
$
37
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Eva Isaksen was born and raised in Bodo, Norway. She earned a M.F.A. in painting from Montana State University in 1986 and has lived and worked as a full time artist in Seattle. Her work is represented locally by the Foster White Gallery, where her next solo show is scheduled for July, 2013. Her work is also represented by Duane Reed Gallery in St. Louis MO and Butters Gallery in Portland, OR. Eva has had numerous exhibitions both nationally and internationally and her work is in several private and public collections. Eva taught print classes at Pratt for over 10 years, starting in 1988. www.evaisaksen.com
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73
Priceless
38
This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for up to three couples to experience two stellar contemporary private craft collections, and will feature major artists working in a variety of media and styles. These two tours of outstanding craft collections in the Washington, DC area have been arranged by Michael Monroe, former director of the Smithsonian Institution’s Renwick Gallery. During his 23 year tenure Michael became personal friends of many of the areas most significant collectors who were also patrons and supporters of the Gallery. Monroe was the director of the Bellevue Arts Museum from 2004 to 2010 and currently serves on Pratt’s Advisory Board.
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Washington D.C. Art Collector’s Tour
As an added treat, enjoy a five course-tasting menu with wine pairings for six in the chef ’s tasting room at Restaurant Eve. An intimate and quaint Irish restaurant is in Old Town Alexandria, run by Chef Cathal Armstrong, who twice cooked for Julia Child, often cooked for Ted Kennedy, and welcomed Michelle and Barack Obama for their intimate 19th wedding anniversary dinner will be the dinner to cap a fabulous day. www.restauranteve.com *Note - Reservations must be made weeks in advance.
Rik Allen DALADIAN DRIFTER
3D 2004 10 x 12 x 6
$
2,400
39
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Rik Allen’s current body of work mines that rich vein between the outward mysteries of creation and the inward journeys of the human imagination. What began several years ago as an exploration of the iconic rocketship in its purest form has evolved into a contemplation of the role of individuals in our finite world, all in relation to the infinite complexity and vastness of the cosmos. We are each explorers on a journey through existence and Allen’s sculptures evoke this introspection and conveyance – spacecraft captained by lonely cartographers mapping the inky black seas between us all, organic vessel-creatures harboring spores of complex knowledge bound for undiscovered mental landscapes, or sentient mechanical emissaries propagating our viral truths through the fabric of being.
Mark Takamichi Miller BACK PACK
40
Oil on canvas 2003 60 x 40
$
3,000
ITEM
Mark Takamichi Miller is an established professional artist who has had solo shows in New York’s Chelsea galleries and Los Angeles’ Chinatown and 19 Northwest gallery shows. He won residencies at the MacDowell Colony (1992 and 1993) and the “Neddy Fellowship in Painting” (2002) by the Behnke Foundation.
PA G E
74
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
1,400
$
ITEM
MAGNUM WITH WINE GOBLETS
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Enjoy a magnum of the finest wine by Charles Smith Wines with six custom wine goblets by glass artist Eric Anderson.
Lee Campbell BLUE VOYAGE II
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Eric Anderson
Bronze, cast glass and wood 2007 5 x 12 x 3
1,600
$
43
ITEM
Lee has been a part of Pratt for many years, as a student, renter and instructor. Pratt facilities provide the resources that have allowed Lee to learn how to work with glass, and how to mold and cast bronze. Lee has continued on to become a teacher and artist using these materials. “Blue Voyage II” recounts Lee’s growing up near the water, and time messing about in boats.
Juan Alonso FAIRIED LEVITATION
Ink and graphite on clayboard 2008 24 x 24 x 2
1,600
$
44
ITEM
The painting Fairied Levitation comes from a body of work inspired by the weathered facades of old buildings in Havana, as well as a series of dreams of levitation. Juan Alonso is influenced by balance, perceived symmetry, architecture, growth and decay, weathered beauty, sensuality and the tug-of-war between the natural and the man-made landscape. www.juanalonso.info
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WINTER’S BOUNTY
Kiln-cast glass, steel, ink and bronze 2010 19 x 32 x 3
$
4,500
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“Winter’s Bounty” stems from a body of work rooted in the exploration of the natural landscape. The glass branches are kiln-cast and the stainless steel panels are textured, engraved and inked. Lisa was a recipient of Pratt’s PONCHO Artist-in-Residence program and it was during this residency that she cast the bronze elements for this piece in Pratt’s foundry. She has been included in exhibitions at Bellevue and Tacoma Art Museums, as well as the Museum of Northwest Art. Lisa holds a MA from Rhode Island School of Design and a BA from University of California, Santa Barbara.
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Lisa Zerkowitz
www.lisazerkowitz.com
Mary Molyneaux FIGURES TIMES THREE
Collage 2009 26.5 x 16
1,600
$
46
ITEM
Mary Molyneaux’s collaged paintings occupy the space between abstraction and realism. Her technique involves the layering of acrylic, paper, collaged elements, ink, and pencil alternating with applications of acrylic medium between layers. Molyneaux has been a practicing artist for over 40 years, working in a variety of media, including 2D and 3D forms. She was born in Kansas and received her bachelor’s degree at Central Missouri University. Further study was completed at the University of Tennessee, Oregon School of Arts and Crafts, Corcoran College of Fine Art, and Pratt Fine Arts Center. Her paintings and sculptures have been exhibited nationally as well as in Central America. Molyneaux’s art is in private, corporate, and public collections in the US as well as Canada, England, Italy, and the Bahamas.
Sabah Al-Dhaher DANCERS
Basalt on granite bases 2010 Composition of two 13 x 4 x 3 and 14 x 3 x 2.5
$
47
2,000
ITEM
“Dancers” are two sculptures carved out of Northwest Basalt. They are an exploration of the esthetic beauty and eloquence of the human form. Sabah has been teaching stone sculpture at Pratt Fine Arts Center since 2000. He has been creating art since his arrival to Seattle from Iraq in 1993. His work is in many private collections in the United States and a few other countries. His Studio and Gallery in West Seattle are open by appointment to groups or individuals. www.sabahfineart.com
PA G E
76
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
CEREMONIAL SPEAR
Glass, steel, beads and copper 2013 65 x 4.5 x 4
$
4,500
48
ITEM
In 2000 Jenny Pohlman and Sabrina Knowles established the Pohlman Knowles High School Scholarship to honor the innercity high school students they taught through our Pratt-funded program, “Fired Up About Glass,” from 1993 to 2000. As many of you know, this spear is their symbol of liberation and self-empowerment. All of the proceeds of this donation raised tonight will fund the scholarship for this year and carry on this tradition. Scholarship recipients can choose any class in any medium that Pratt offers. www.pohlmanknowles.com
BOTTLED EMOTIONS
$
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Sabrina Knowles & Jenny Pohlman
5,000
49
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The piece is a customizable wall installation consisting of four 48” shelves holding 48 cobalt blue wine bottles each sandblasted with a different emotion. Jeff has donated the piece to the Susan Balshor Memorial Fund.
John Kiley LINEAR SEPARATION
John Kiley 2012 10 x 13 x 9
$
6,500
50
ITEM
John Kiley’s blown and cut glass sculptures are an exploration form and balance. Since 2008 his work has been featured in over 20 national and international exhibitions. A professional glassblower for over 20 years, he has worked alongside Lino Tagliapietra, Dale Chihuly, Dante Marioni, and Benjamin Moore and is currently the Glass Director at the Schack Art Center in Everett, WA. He is represented by Traver Gallery in Seattle, WA. www.travergallery.com
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RW.2, FOCUS
Metal, enamel on copper, stitching 2012 15 x 32 x 4
$
2,200
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Rickie Wolfe lives, works and teaches in Seattle, Washington, where she has a studio practice in printmaking, sculpture and painting. She is currently the coordinator for the Print Shop at Pratt, where she also teaches collage and printmaking. Rickie is represented by Gallery IMA in Seattle and by Fresh Paint Art in Los Angeles, California. She was honored with the PONCHO Artist-in-Residence grant at Pratt Fine Arts Center for 2010-2011. Rickie received her BFA from Cornish College of the Arts in 2000.
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Rickie Wolfe
www.rickiewolfe.com www.galleryima.com
Stephanie Hargrave LUCIDITY 3
Encaustic 2011 31 x 25
1,600
$
52
ITEM
Stephanie Hargrave’s encaustic work strives to combine biology and botany, and is influenced by the shape of natural structures as varied as pods, spines, DNA strands, cellular structures, and husks. Creating depth and luminosity with wax interests her, as does the idea of receded portions that play with transparency juxtaposed with pure, rich color. Stephanie has been showing he work since 2005 in Seattle with Patricia Rovzar Gallery. She is represented by Circa Gallery in Minneapolis and Anne Irwin Fine Art in Atlanta. She recently finished several commissions, and had a solo show this past November entitled Rubia. www.stephaniehargrave.com
Seattle Metal Guild
Jewelry 21 x 1 x 1
MAD PRATTER NECKLACE
$
53
1,650
ITEM
This necklace represents a cross section of the talents of the nationally known metalsmithing community. Artists: Anne Randall, Virginia Causey, Aaron Barr, Marcia Gering, Dayna Cassara, Suzy Whitehead, Micki Lippe, Joan Hammond, Carolina Andersson, Roger Horner, and Sarah Gascoigne.
PA G E
78
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
PEPPERS + PODS
Steel and paper 2013 10 x 10 x 2
1,400
$
54
ITEM
Chris Abrass’ work draws inspiration from Pratt instructors to explore new materials and methods not used in traditional jewelry such as gold and silver. It reflects a transition back toward Chris’ original roots as a maker of large metal sculpture. A long time Pratt supporter, she is also the former President of Pratt’s Board of Trustees.
Rachel Illingworth MELALEUCA
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Chris Abrass
Shellac plate print 2011 40.25 x 16.75 x 1.5
1,200
$
55
ITEM
This print is one of a series of monoprints inspired by a trip to Australia. Each print is unique and is created by printing from shellac coated cardboard plates used for both relief and intaglio. Rachel grew up in Tasmania, Australia and has lived in the Northwest since 1993. her work is in local and international collections and can be seen at the SAM gallery in Seattle. www.rachelillingworth.com
Lara Swimmer SCL MIXING MEETING STAIR
Type C Print 2004 30 x 40 x 1
1,000
JUROR’S
CHOICE
$
56
ITEM
Lara was a student of film theory and media at the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg School, as well as in Paris at the Center for Film and Critical Studies, and at the Sorbonne. She graduated with honors, and also holds a degree in French Literature. The direction of her work has been influenced by the architecture of 20th century Europe, and by the sensibilities of the Bauhaus, Mies Van Der Rohe, and the International Style in design and architecture. www.swimmerphoto.com
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79
$
500
57
The Walla Walla Valley, Washington State’s premier wine growing region, is home to over 100 wineries and tasting rooms. Walla Walla Wine Country offers the rare opportunity to experience not only worldclass wines but to meet the winemakers, vintners, and family members carrying on the wine tradition. Start your weekend with a VIP tasting at K Vintners & Charles Smith Wines (Food and Wine Magazine’s “Winemaker of the Year”) and continue your visit with a customized tour of suggested wineries and restaurants (provided by the Charles Smith Wines Team). Includes tasting and a two-night stay at the Marcus Whitman Hotel, located in the heart of downtown, where you will experience luxury and history. To tempt your palette, take home a selection (6 bottles) of award winning Charles Smith Wines.
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Walla Walla Wine Experience
Fine Print: One-month advance notice required for hotel booking and tasting room appointment. Please contact Madeline Pennington (madeline@charlessmithwines.com or 206.554.1580) to coordinate tour. Expires 6/1/2014
Roger MacPherson MASI PRINCESS
Encaustic 2013 36 x 18 x 2
1,350
$
58
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Roger has been involved with Pratt since 2000. He has served as President and hs been bestowed Pratt’s highest honor or the “Service in the Arts Award”. While traveling in Kenya’s Masi Mari, Roger found the people to be very warm-hearted and regal. This Masi Princess was captured in a photo and photo transferred onto the wax medium. Fabrics from Korea create the interesting textures in the encaustic painting.
Cappy Thompson, Walt Lieberman & Dick Weiss CAPP, DICK AND WALT AT THE PRATT
59
2011 Print
$
600
ITEM
Longtime collaborators, Cappy Thompson, Walter Lieberman and Dick Weiss gave a demonstration at the Glass Art Society Conference, centered at Pratt, and a produced this engaging & fun piece.
PA G E
80
Restrictions: All art purchases are subject to a 10% processing fee.
FOSTERING HOPE. INSPIRING CHaNGE. MakING a DIFFERENCE.
WE SaluTE PRaTT FINE aRTS CENTER aND THEIR OuTSTaNDING WORk IN THE aRT COMMuNITy
T H E M A D PR ATTER A U C TION A N D IN V ITATION D ESI G N B Y
DA N DY- C O.C O M
MAD-PRTTR BARRIER
Barrier Motors is a proud sponsor of the Pratt Fine Arts Center.
425-455-8535 www.barriermotors.com
M E R C E D E S - B E N Z • AU D I • VO LVO • P O R S C H E
BM 1435_Mad Pratter Ad_B.indd 1
3/13/13 2:39 PM
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F IN E ART AU C TI O N 2013
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P R AT T F I NE A RTS C E N TE R
Notes
Legacy at Pratt Park Pratt Fine Arts Center
Is proud to sponsor Pratt Fine Arts Center’s st
31 Annual Fine Arts Auction Legacy Partners Residential NOW LEASING Pratt Art Institute students and friends will be able to enjoy spacious new studio, 1 bedroom, and 2 bedroom homes with spectacular views of Elliott Bay, Mt. Rainier and the Cascades.
Community amenities include an exercise facility, movie theater, community room, rooftop P-Patch garden, and Built Green certification. Two level live-work studios on 19th Avenue have been designed with Pratt students in mind. The homes feature living space on the upper level and studio/gallery space at the street level. In partnership with the Pratt Fine Arts Center, the community will feature a rotating display of Pratt instructor and student artwork in the main lobbies, as well as provide special discounts to Pratt students.
Come by, tour and lease your new home today!! (206) 268-2668 1800 S Jackson St. Seattle WA 98144
T h a n k Yo u, Co nt ri bu ti ng Ar ti st s!
Pratt Fine Arts Center is truly blessed with a dynamic community of artists, who support the organization’s mission in a myr iad of ways, year after year. The Mad Pratter auction feat ures an especially wondrous display of art contrib uted by a most incredible and generous group of artists.
Artists, we stand in absolute awe of you
r creative are truly grateful for your gifts this year. Thank you !
contributions to the field and we
Collectors, we encourage you to bid
boldly this evening in support of our cause and in support of these artists who have been so giving. But we also encourage you to extend your sup port of these artists by visiting their studios and gall eries, and continuing to invest in their work throughou t the year.
w w w. p r at t. o r g