The art education history of Leah Wingfield, who was born in Phoenix, Arizona, in 1957,1Leah Wingfield Bio. http://www.habatat.com/bio_popup.asp?ArtistID=77. Accessed July 3, 2013.Google Scholar is widely varied. From 1977-1978 she studied ceramics at the Glendale Community College, in Glendale, Arizona.2Masterpiece Online The World of Art at Your Fingertips. Website. http://www.masterpieceonline.com/bio.php?artistId=10009992&id=16A2-CHDH-6E59&name=Leah%20Wingfield. Accesssed July 2, 2013.Google Scholar In 1984 she studied hot glass at the Pilchuck School in Stanwood, Washington, under Dan Dailey,3Wentz M.R. The Good Grandees by Dan Dailey.Mayo Clin Proc. 2005; 80: 1103Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF Google Scholar and subsequently taught there in 1988 and 1990. She also studied design and drawing at Phoenix College, Phoenix, Arizona, in 1985.2Masterpiece Online The World of Art at Your Fingertips. Website. http://www.masterpieceonline.com/bio.php?artistId=10009992&id=16A2-CHDH-6E59&name=Leah%20Wingfield. Accesssed July 2, 2013.Google Scholar Having mastered glassblowing, Wingfield, found working in cast glass to be more freeing. She stated “Glassblowing is more of a sport, where casting is limitless technique.”4Oregon Art Beat: Leah Wingfield and Steve Clements. http://www.opb.org/programs/artbeat/segments/view/836. Accessed July 3, 2013.Google Scholar She frequently collaborates with her husband, Steve Clements,4Oregon Art Beat: Leah Wingfield and Steve Clements. http://www.opb.org/programs/artbeat/segments/view/836. Accessed July 3, 2013.Google Scholar and when describing their collaborative process, commented, “We have to do what the muse tells us…hopefully the muse shows up!” They currently reside in Jacksonville, Oregon.5Leah Wingfield Profile. USA Projects website. http://www.hatchfund.org/user/leahwingfield. Accessed July 9, 2013.Google Scholar Chance Meeting–Street, (26.5 × 14 ×7 in) is one of a series of sculptures by Wingfield, created in her favored medium and technique of carved and polished cast glass. Sculpted with intricate detail and sandblasted for the opaque and muted finish, Chance Meeting–Street narrates an event: two presences brushing past each other, their obvious hurriedness, oblivious to their surroundings, momentarily suspended in the experience of the other. It is intimate and sensual. Movement flows through each of them as gracefully as if they were a pair of choreographed ballet dancers or equally paired figure skaters performing their roles in the middle of a street. Their apparel suggests a blustery day, with the tam and long coat of the gent, and present-day time revealed in the tunic and slacks of the lady. Hands swaying in rhythm to their gait, are they poised for a kiss? Wingfield stated: “My deep, dark secret is that I want to make a Masterpiece,”5Leah Wingfield Profile. USA Projects website. http://www.hatchfund.org/user/leahwingfield. Accessed July 9, 2013.Google Scholar and perhaps has done so in Chance Meeting–Street. A gift of Edward F. Anixter, Chance Meeting–Street is located on the 4th floor of the Mayo Building in Rochester, Minnesota.