Glen Lukens

Glenn William Lukens (1887-1967) was a ceramicist, glassmaker, and jewelry designer born in Missouri. He is best known for his innovative work with glazes and his contributions to modernist jewelry.[1] Lukens helped pave the way for ceramics today as an awarding winning ceramiscist and teacher.[2] Lukens was influential in the Pottery Movement and challenged the American Pottery industry's traditions of design, function, and decoration in the 1930s.[2]

Personal life

Glenn Lukens was born in Missouri in 1887 and later moved to Los Angeles to live and work in 1925. He had previously taught high school classes in Fullerton, California before becoming a professor at University of Southern California where he founded the ceramics program and taught metalwork in the architectural school.[3] He spent eight years of his life searching for alkaline metals in the Mojave Desert that would help him discover and create a new blue glaze.[3]

Professional Life

Lukens main focus was in glazes and colors because he tended to use molds to make his actual clay bodies.[3] He came up with several new glazes and techniques, and he was a leader in working with new rough clay designs.[2] After the time he spent in the desert, Lukens began to incorporate rougher, coarse textures that represented the different elements of the desert like fossilized wood, clay, and rock formations.[3] People had grown fond of Luken's work especially in dinnerware.[2] Lukens later spent fifteen years as a writer and illustrator for the magazine Popular Ceramics. He was also a member of the Art Teachers Association of Southern California.[1] Lukens currently has an award in his name (Glenn Lukens Award) at the University of Southern California's School of Fine Arts.

Techniques

References

  1. 1 2 Ask Art Academic, "Glen William Lukens." Accessed March 6, 2013. http://www.askart.com/askart/artist.aspx?artist=11083033.
  2. 1 2 3 4 University of Missouri: Museum of Art and Archaeology, "Feeling, Thought and Spirit: The Ceramic Work of Glen Lukens." Last modified 2006. Accessed March 7, 2013. http://maa.missouri.edu/exhibitions/2006/GlenLukens.html.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Cerio, Michael. "American studio ceramics at mid century." The Magazine Antiques, March 2009. http://www.themagazineantiques.com/articles/american-studio-ceramics-at-mid-century/1/ (accessed March 7, 2013).
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