Artist Lectures and Hot Glass Demos with Steve Hagan and Mark Leputa
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Artist Lectures and Hot Glass Demos with Steve Hagan and Mark Leputa

By Duncan McClellan Gallery

Visiting artists Steve Hagan and Mark Leputa share their strategies for creating one-of-a-kind glass sculptures!

Date and time

Location

Duncan McClellan Gallery

2342 Emerson Avenue South St. Petersburg, FL 33712

Good to know

Highlights

  • 4 hours
  • all ages
  • In person
  • Free parking

About this event

Arts • Fine Art

Steve Hagan is a glass artist, foodie, and proponent of pure beauty. His works combine a love of function with modern form and design, while often creating a mix of citrus-inspired jewelry, tableware, and sculpture. A Philadelphia native, Steve attended Tyler School of Art, where he was first able to witness the fluid and spontaneous nature of glass. After graduating in 2002 from Temple University, he spent the next few years invested in the public access glass scene of Philadelphia, teaching at multiple area studios. In 2008, he re-entered academia and began his graduate studies at Southern Illinois University Carbondale. His thesis exhibition titled “The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree” in 2011 opened up a more sculptural approach to his studio practice, combining both extensive murrini pattern applications and non-vessel glass blowing. Since that time, he has lived all around the US while traveling to make his work through residencies and as a visiting artist. Currently residing in Tucson, he runs a private glass studio with Mark Leputa, where they have a warm, flame, and cold shop while utilizing Sonoran Glass School’s public access hot shop for their glassblowing applications.

For Mark Leputa, the greatest sense of self-satisfaction and pride is found in the creative process. Graduating from the University of Pittsburgh in 2003 with a BA in Communications, Mark always felt his imagination was being suppressed. Not until a short holiday to New Zealand in 2004 did Mark submit to his longing to be a full-time artist. There, he finally discovered the medium he had long been seeking – glass. The heat, the fire, the seemingly liquid state that this material is worked in entranced him. The short holiday turned into a three-year apprenticeship. During this time, he was able to define a body of work where simplicity, purity of form, and negative space are merged to meet harmony.

We invite you to join us on February 15th to hear from these inspiring artists and to witness them work in our hotshop. Lectures begin promptly at noon, followed by hot glass demos until 4 pm. This event is free and open to the public of all ages!

Organized by

Duncan McClellan Gallery

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Free
Feb 15 · 12:00 PM EST