Abstract

Colored glass in the form of stained-glass windows has been used to decorate buildings for over a thousand years. Due to various late-twentieth-century technological achievements, this material allows for a broad spectrum of design solutions. Glass can be used both in contemporary and historical buildings. This paper presents an analysis of the work of Tomasz Urbanowicz, an artist who works with glass, and its objective is to present not only the body of work of this artist but also the means of using colored glass in creating new values in architecture. The work is based on a study of the literature that covers the contemporary application of colored glass, on-site analysis of projects, and a series of interviews with the artist before, during, and after project completion, as well as the authors’ personal experience in the matter. One of the main research methods used was an analysis of the artist’s stance, as to him, the very process of pursuing creative inspiration is a fundamental procedure. Glassworks by Urbanowicz were displayed at the EXPO 2000 in Hanover (Germany), the EXPO 2005 in Aichi (Japan), and the EXPO 2008 in Saragossa (Spain). The United Earth glass sphere has been decorating the agora of the European Parliament building in Strasbourg (France) since 2004. In the paper, the artist’s projects are presented in two groups: The first includes solutions that employ monochromatic color schemes, whereas in the second, color has been used to create a strong contrast. The analysis presented includes interventions in historical buildings under heritage conservation, but also compositions from architectural glass in newly built buildings and that reference place-based history. Both the initial vision and the final effect of the glass architectural compositions are site-specific. The analysis of these differences and how the artist works allowed us to formulate a scheme of how he operates. Urbanowicz’s glass interventions affect the quality of the spaces they create and highlight their existing or expected features. The influence of the works can either play a primary and dominant role in relation with the surrounding space or be a secondary and delicate addition. Applied color may have different functions, from highlighting specific aspects of a building to introducing symbolic or direct reference. In many projects, color works as a source of a building interior’s atmosphere. The artistic interventions in historic spaces emphasize their features without disrupting pre-existing authenticity, whereas contemporary projects with no historic reference offer a wide variety of color applications that focus on the function and form of architecture, landscape, or surroundings.

Highlights

  • Contemporary Techniques in Artistic Glass in ArchitectureGlass is an exceptional material in the context of color in architecture due to its translucency and reflective properties

  • Contemporary technologies of large-scale artistic glass casting allows one to modify the parameters of flat glass, resulting in multicolor compositions that change along with the movement of the observer, lighting, or the surroundings

  • Up to the end of the twentieth century, colored artistic glass was used in stained-glass windows

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Summary

Introduction—Contemporary Techniques in Artistic Glass in Architecture

Glass is an exceptional material in the context of color in architecture due to its translucency and reflective properties. The process of producing float glass was invented in 1953 by Sir Alastair Pilkington (Wala 2012) This breakthrough moment allowed artists to access new means of creating large-scale works without divisions, which had been forced by the size of individual glass elements, their thickness, and their durability. One contemporary technique that stands out here, it is rarely used, is the casting of either one or several sheets of float glass in kilns, which allows one to obtain a monolithic, textured object (kiln-formed glass) Such a glass object can be later painted using metal oxides or fired again to fuse the color with the surface of the glass. This paper presents the original, innovative approach of the artist to the use of color in compositions made from artistic glass in relation to architecture This text discusses the complex history of the works’ creation, and their ideative identity, symbolism, contextuality, and creative assumptions. The research method is based on the analysis of the literature that covers the contemporary application of colored glass, on-site field research of projects, and a series of interviews with the artist before, during, and after project completion, drawing conclusions from the conducted research and analyses and the authors’ personal experience in the matter

State of Research
Materials and Methods
The Creative Ideas of Tomasz Urbanowicz
Tomasz Urbanowicz’s Design Process and His Techniques of Working with Color
Multicolored Projects
Monochromatic Projects
Contemporary Artistic Glass in Architecture Without Historical Context
Contemporary Artistic Glass in Architecture without Historical Context
Discussion and Conclusions
Full Text
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