March 2010 HARDCOVER ISBN 13: 978-1-55595-354-6 ISBN: 1-55595-354-9 156 pages 9 x 11 in. 23 x 28 cm. US $ 50
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Breaking Ground A Century of Craft Art in Western New York
By Barbara Lovenheim, Suzanne Ramljak, Paul J. Smith
♦ Artist interviews with Wendell Castle, Albert Paley,
Wayne Higby, and Michael Taylor
♦ Definitive history of this rich artist’s community in
New York State that fostered some of the leading artists
in the furniture and studio craft movement in America
♦ Of interest to all craft museums, schools, and libraries
as well as collectors and art historians
♦ Includes the work of artists whose work has been
collected by the Smithsonian’s Renwick Gallery,
Washington, D.C.; New York City’s Museum of Arts
and Design and Metropolitan Museum of Art; the
Philadelphia Museum of Art, and the Victoria and
Albert Museum, among many others.
It was in the rolling hills and small cities of western
New York State that the studio craft movement took
root and thrived. In the early 1900s it pulsated with
Charles Fergus Binns’s New York State School of
Clay-Working at Alfred University; Elbert Hubbard’s
Roycroft community; Gustav Stickley’s furniture
workshops, and Steuben Glass in Corning.
In the middle-to-late 20th century, Alfred nourished
such important ceramists as Daniel Rhodes, Ted Randall,
and Robert Turner; the school is still ripe with talented
artists including Val Cushing, Anne Currier, Andrea and
John Gill, and Walter McConnell. In 1950, the School for
American Craftsmen (SAC) moved to Rochester recruiting
from Europe Tage Frid, John Prip, and Franz Wildenhain
to build its departments. Today the area is a nexus of craft
activity with such artists as Tom Markusen, Andy Buck,
John Eric Byers, and Concetta Mason.
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