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Suspicious Cleavage Jones
Suspicious Cleavage Jones

Suspicious Cleavage Jones

Artist (American, 1951 – 2019)
Date1995
MediumBlown glass with murrini pattern
DimensionsOverall: 33 1/2 × 19 1/2 × 11 in., 21.7 lb. (85.1 × 49.5 × 27.9 cm, 9.8 kg)
ClassificationsGlass
Credit LineMuseum purchase, 2023
Object number2023.23
Stephen Rolfe Powell was an influential artist and college professor at Centre College in Kentucky, best-known for creating sculptural forms accentuated with psychedelic tie-dye patterns. Powell not only mastered the centuries-old Venetian glassmaking technique of making murrini to create surface patterns, he also pioneered a kaleidoscopic aesthetic unique to his artistry. First, Powell worked with a team of studio assistants to create thin rods of multi-colored glass, known as canes. Next, murrini were made by slicing the complex canes into cross-sections and carefully arranging them in a vibrant pattern. Then, the intricate pattern, consisting of thousands of murrini, was heated and embedded into the molten glass bubble and distorted during the glassblowing process. Powell named his works with humorous titles, like Suspicious Cleavage Jones, alluding to the sensually-inspired forms.
On View
On view
Location
  • Kotler-Coville Glass Pavilion, 2nd Floor, gallery, floor