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John Littleton : ウィキペディア英語版
John Littleton and Kate Vogel


John Littleton (born 1957) and Kate Vogel (born 1956) are American studio glass artists who have worked collaboratively since 1979.〔Duncan, Katherine, “Generations: Harvey Littleton, John Littleton, Kate Vogel” (exhibition catalog), Southern Highland Craft Guild, Asheville, North Carolina 1995 (unpaginated)〕 They are considered to be among the third generation of American Studio Glass Movement artists who trace their roots to the work of Harvey Littleton in the 1960s. John Littleton, the youngest child of Harvey Littleton, grew up in the shadow of his father's accomplishments in Madison, Wisconsin, where he experienced first-hand the personalities and events of the early glass movement. Glass, however, was not John Littleton's first medium of choice when it came time for him to select a career. It was only after majoring in photography at the University of Wisconsin–Madison that he began to create in glass. He soon formed a collaborative partnership with another art student, Kate Vogel, who had exchanged her study of two dimensional art for glass. The artists' earliest collaborations in glass were the bag forms for which they are well-known today. Since 2000 their work has included a series of arms and hands cast in amber-colored glass. Over the years the hands have held various objects, including river stones, large faceted glass “jewels”, and colorful cast glass leaves. In recent years Littleton and Vogel have also become known for their series of functional glass and wrought iron side tables.
==Early life==
John Littleton is the son of glass artist Harvey Littleton and his wife, Bess Tamura Littleton. He was born in 1957 in Madison, Wisconsin, where his father was a professor of art at the University of Wisconsin. Known as the father of the Studio Glass Movement, Harvey Littleton had introduced glass as a medium for the studio artist in two workshops that he organized on the grounds the Toledo Museum of Art in 1962.〔Duncan, 1995 (unpaginated)〕 That fall, Littleton began teaching glass in a garage at his rural Wisconsin home and later secured University of Wisconsin funding to rent and equip an off-campus glass department in Madison.〔Byrd, (1984) p. 13〕 Harvey Littleton soon gained significant exposure for his artwork in glass and became a self-described “evangelist” for the medium,〔Grasberg (1997)〕 lecturing about its potential for the studio artist throughout the Midwest and Northeastern United States.
As a boy John Littleton grew up around glass art and his father’s colleagues in glass, including Dale Chihuly, Fritz Dreisbach, Erwin Eisch, Robert C. Fritz and Marvin Lipofsky.〔Duncan, 1995 (unpaginated)〕 When it came time to select a course of study in college, John Littleton, in a bid to establish his identity apart from that of his father,〔Duncan, 1995 (unpaginated)〕 majored in photography with Cavalierre Ketchum (b. 1934) and did independent study in glass with David Willard.〔David Willard headed the glass program at the University of Wisconsin, Madison from 1977 to 1982. (International Polymer Clay Association website ). Accessed 9/01/09〕 He graduated in 1979 with a Bachelor of Science in Art from the University of Wisconsin–Madison.〔Who’s Who in Contemporary Glass Art, Joachim Waldrich Verlag, Munich, 1993, page 329〕
Kate Vogel was born in 1956 in Cambridgeshire, England to David and Patricia Vogel. David Vogel, who studied at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) on an ROTC scholarship, was serving in the U.S. Army there. Vogel and his young family returned to the United States when Kate was about two years old. They settled in Madison, Wisconsin where David went to work for the family-owned Vogel Brothers Building Company. He was named president of the company in 1969.〔(Vogel Brothers Building Company website ). Accessed 8/27/09〕 As a college student at the University of Wisconsin, Kate Vogel initially studied two-dimensional art, specifically drawing and painting. In 1977 she was enrolled in a summer course at Santa Reperata Graphic Arts Center in Florence, Italy. While in Italy she took a trip to the Venetian island of Muranowhere she visited some of the glass factories.〔Hunter, Elizabeth, “Team Spirit: Kate Vogel and John Littleton are partners in art and life”, NC Home, Business North Carolina, Charlotte, NC, February 1993, page 13〕 On the recommendation of a fellow student, Vogel enrolled in the University of Wisconsin's glass program under David Willard. She received the Bachelor of Science in Art in 1978.〔Who’s Who’s in Contemporary Glass Art, 1993, page 589〕
Vogel and Littleton met while both were in college. Their first collaboration in glass took place in 1979 at the Spruce Pine, North Carolina studio of Harvey Littleton, who had relocated there three years earlier, after his retirement from the University of Wisconsin.〔Duncan, 1995 (unpaginated)〕 John Littleton and Kate Vogel moved to North Carolina in the summer of 1979, eventually settling in Bakersville, where they built their studio and hot shop. In North Carolina’s Blue Ridge Mountains they found themselves in the midst of a growing community of glass artists, including Rick and Valerie Beck, Gary Beecham, Katherine and William Bernstein, Shane Fero, Rob Levin, Mark Peiser, Richard Ritter, Jeffrey M. Todd, Yaffa Sikorsky-Todd and Jan Williams. For Kate Vogel, the sense of community was “wonderful” because it not only allowed her to see what her peers were doing aesthetically, but also to consult with them on technical questions.〔Hunter, Elizabeth, “Exquisite Eye Candy: World Class Glass in the North Carolina Mountains”, Blue Ridge Country, Volume VIII Number 4, 1995 pages 19-22〕

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