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exhibitions

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Previous Exhibitions at
The Bead Museum

Trajectories: Progressions in Contemporary Art Glass Beads
September 15, 2006 - March 30, 2007

Hushed exclamations of wonder could be heard as visitors wandered the miniature sparkling city of art glass beads at the Trajectories exhibit opening on September 15th.  A chuckle floated in the air at the humor of Sharon Peter's bead "Trajectories: Checker Cab to Mars," with its tiny yellow and black checkered rocket ship blasting away from the glass globe of the earth, or a gasp of amazement at the intricacies of the serene face looking out from the gold frame in the portrait piece The Saint Mary by artist Wakana Takahashi.

Trajectories, a joint exhibition by the International Society of Glass Beadmakers and the Bead Museum, celebrates the founding of the ISGB and the 20th anniversary of the Bead Museum by Gabrielle Liese.  In addition, Trajectories is the inaugural exhibition in the brand new gallery space added to the museum by the City of Glendale during our recent expansion project.

 


Following is a small sampling of the glorious beads in this exhibition.  To see all the beads and learn more about the artists, please visit the exhibition in Glendale, AZ or as it travels, or purchase a catalog from the Museum Store.

Chinese New Year Dragon
by: Sharon Peters

Lampworked glass bead with inset eyes, various sculptural techniques.  Hole is vertical: inspired by a fancy chopstick cover.  Created in 2005.

 


Looking Glass
by: Karl and Krista Tseu

A magnificent cold worked lapidary focal bead constructed of a metallic bronzed exterior and a gorgeous floral cylinder within a clear glass matrix.  Created in 2005.


Unicorn
by: Lucio Bubacco

Lampworked batuto, a cold-working engraving technique.  Created in 2005.

 


Cuttlefish Containing Forest of Fungi
by: Akiko Isono

Lampworked,sculpted, encased, using soda lime glass.  Created in 2005.

 


Interpretation of Ancient Warring States
by: Dustin Tabor

Lampworked Effetre glass.  Created in 2005.


 


Flower Garden
by: Pati Walton

Lampworked glass. 
 

 


A Date of Goldfish
by: Rinako Suzuki

Dotting, drawing.  Created in 2005.

 

 


Mosaic Jazz Window
by: Art Seymour

A combination of the Jazz series and the Window series.  Decorated with mosaic canes made at the furnace.  Prepared sections of the bead are assembled in the torch then reground and polished.

       


For more information on the ISGB, visit their site at www.isgb.org.

Trajectories was created by The Bead Museum and will travel widely after it closes on March 30.  If your institution is interested in hosting this exquisite exhibition, please contact the Executive Director of ISGB, Gwynne Rukenbrod at 614.830.0701.  Click here for more information.


nyama: The Vital Force in African Ceremony
April 2006 - April 2007

Featuring ritual objects, textiles, beads, clothing and beaded artifacts, nyama: The Vital Force in African Ceremony takes the visitor on an awe-inspiring journey through the transitional life ceremonies of various African cultures.

Ritual or ceremony is an extremely important part of all of the African cultures and is one of the oldest forms of human activity. It marks the passage from one life stage to another in a series of cyclical events that ensure the unification of the entire community, affirms its values and traditions, and promotes the continuation of each culture. Nyama, or the vital force found in all living things, is imparted to the objects used in rituals and ceremonies such as masks, sculptures, and beads.

The objects featured in nyama: The Vital Force in African Ceremony are all drawn from musical ritual performance, traditional dance and from the objects and adornments worn and carried in everyday life. They represent a cross section of the rich cultural heritage of the over 1,000 ethnic groups in Africa.
 

   

(sponsored by Arizona Commission on the Arts, Arizona Community Foundation, and the Northern California Bead Society)


Honoring Others, Honors Ourselves: Traditional Apache Beadwork
September 2006 - April, 2007

This exhibition in the Museum lobby has been extended through April.  It focuses on the beaded T-necklaces worn by White Mountain Apache girls during their Sunrise Ceremony at puberty.  Also included in the exhibit are examples of men's beaded pouches and a tribute to writer Michael Lacapa for his literary and personal contributions to his people.  The exhibit was inspired by Lacapa's philosophy of giving honor to all things large and small as seen in his book "Antelope Woman." 

Beadwork continues to be an important part of Apache life.  The T-Necklace became an essential part of the Changing Woman ceremony just after the 1900s.   T-Necklaces sometimes incorporate traditional Apache colors that are also associated with the 4 earthly directions: east, yellow; south, white; west, blue or green; north, black; as well as colors to symbolize sunset.  These color combinations continue to be incorporated into many Apache beaded ceremonial clothes, ritual objects and the womens traditional camp dresses.

Many American Indian societies, such as the Western Apache peoples of eastern Arizona, believe in the interconnectedness of all life.  This awareness and the following of their cosmology guides them in how to conduct themselves in harmony and balance within the universe. These beliefs may be practiced through communal ritual and ceremony, storytelling and creative, visual expressions that influence their daily lives.


Beads: Timeless Treasures

Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport is home to one of the largest airport art programs in the United States with a collection of more than 200 works and changing exhibit spaces in terminal 2, 3 and 4 as well as Deer Valley and Goodyear.

Sponsored by the City of Phoenix Aviation Department, the Sky Harbor Art Program showcases Arizona's unique artistic and cultural heritage.
Beads can be traced back 30,000 years and to many cultures and regions. Originally, items such as shells, animal teeth, ivory, rocks and seeds were pierced and strung to become the first beads. These items might express a persons uniqueness, serve as a talisman or be used as a form of currency. Glass beads came much later. Until 4500 years ago, glass came from lightening strikes, volcanic eruptions or meteorite impacts. Initially, humans used glass to imitate gemstones, but then glass itself became precious, a symbol of wealth and status.

The modern era of beadwork began around 1480 when Venetians learned to create glass tubes and turn them into beads. From Venice, trade routes passed to the east into China, south into Africa and west into the Americas. Because Venetians did not disclose their secrets of bead making, beads remained valuable trade objects. These small treasures continue to fascinate us with their uniqueness, beauty and their ability to connect us to our human stories.

The Bead Museum houses an international collection of more than 100,00 beads and beaded artifacts. It provides changing exhibits and an educational program of lectures, tours, and classes. The museum sells bead supplies, publications, and beads for the collector.


Beadwork II: The Embellished Shoe

This exhibition, sponsored by Beadwork Magazine (Interweave Press), is a spectacular traveling showcase of beaded footwear that was chosen from among hundreds of entries into the "Beadwork II: The Embellished Shoe" juried competition. This exhibition, sponsored by Beadwork Magazine (Interweave Press), is a spectacular traveling showcase of beaded footwear that was chosen from among hundreds of entries into the "Beadwork II: The Embellished Shoe" juried competition.

This display includes wonderfully varied and creative takes on footwear, featuring every type of shoe from sandals to cloggs to tennis shoes to "fluffy" pink bedroom slippers.


Ojime: Miniature Master Pieces from Japan

This exhibit was a selection of beads from a prestigious comprehensive collection of 75 ojime collected and donated to The Bead Museum by Lois Sherr Dubin in 1999. This exhibit was a selection of beads from a prestigious comprehensive collection of 75 ojime collected and donated to The Bead Museum by Lois Sherr Dubin in 1999. Some of these beads in this collection appear in publications, The History of Beads (published 1887, USA) by Lois Sherr Dubin and Ojime - Magical Jewels of Japan (published 1991, USA) by Robert O. Kinsey.

Ojime - (oh-gee-meh) a crafted bead that forms part of an accessory worn by a man to carry small personal belongings suspended from the sash of a kimono.


French Beaded Flowers

This exhibition was a selection of beaded flower pieces. Bead flower making was developed as a craft centuries ago by peasants of France and northern Italy. Enterprising glass manufacturers employed these folk during the winter months when they no longer tending vineyards and they were able to work on cottage industry projects indoors. Glass beads were manufactured in these conditions to be used for the embroidery of magnificent costumes of French courtiers. This exhibition was a selection of beaded flower pieces. Bead flower making was developed as a craft centuries ago by peasants of France and northern Italy. Enterprising glass manufacturers employed these folk during the winter months when they no longer tending vineyards and they were able to work on cottage industry projects indoors. Glass beads were manufactured in these conditions to be used for the embroidery of magnificent costumes of French courtiers.

Standards were high for these luxury items and the imperfect beads, rather than being discarded, were used by enterprising peasants to create beaded flowers. These flowers were used in numerous ways. They were carried by altar or choir boys in religious precessions on Easter and Christmas or arranged into bridal altar bouquets and also as funeral wreaths. But the 19th century it became fashionable to convert these impressive sprays and wreaths into wall sconces and lamp fittings. It was not uncommon to use prison labor at this time. Today bead artists all over the world have taken up this craft, inspired by these charming arrangements and continue to find new ways of using the flowers.


Incredible Polymer: Feats of Clay

Polymer Clay is the popular name for any of several brands of commercially available polymer modeling compound, including Fimo, Sculpy, Premo, and Cernit. These are manufactured in America and abroad and have become very popular for beadmaking during the past 10 years. Hundreds of artists and craftspeople use polymer clay to make a broad variety of beads and ornaments using a remarkably wide assortment of techniques and styles. It can be used similarly to both glass and clay, and also through unique applications that no other medium provides. The material is available in a range of colors, that can be mixed for any palate. It is kneaded to a soft consistency, sculpted or manipulated and ornamented, then placed into a conventional oven to be hardened during a short exposure to relatively low heat. The material itself is actually Polyvinyl Chloride - a variety of plastic that has been given a consistency similar to artificial rubber.
This exhibition of polymer clay beads, jewelry, and beaded art was the second juried exhibit sponsored by The Bead Museum. It contained the work of 21 artists from around the country, including a wall display coordinated by the Arizona Polymer Clay Guild and pieces selected from the work of guest artists.


The Huichol Web of Life: Creation and Prayer

This exhibition clearly shows how the beadwork and yarn work of the Huichol Indians integrates art into everyday living with symbols, colors and forms that have meaning and significance in their world.
The Huicholes create unique, visually stimulating and informative beaded and textile art exhibition that reflects their way of life. These works of art demonstrate the value of symbols in beadwork and yarn paintings that communicate shared human concerns not only within the Huichol culture, but also in the world around them. The Huichol until recently had no written language. These symbols are a means to communicate their history and myths. These artisans live "The Huichol Way", a way of thinking and a way of a centuries old culture surviving in the modern world.

The purpose of this exhibit is to inspire viewers to consider the integration of art and social studies as a means of awareness that is relevant and significant to their own lives.
Issues presented in this exhibition also assist with public awareness of the politically threatened Huichol people and their struggle for preservation of their cultural heritage though the commercial sale of bead and textile artifacts.

This exhibit is closely associated with the Huichol Inspired classes offered by the Bead Museum. In these classes, students should learn to work with beads and other materials in creating objects based on Huichol art making techniques. Learn more about Huichol culture by visiting our Huichol program page under Education.


Conservation: it's in the bag...

Conservation: it's in the bag...This exhibit displayed beaded bags. As beadwork begins to age, there are noticeable changes in the materials. Normal use of the bag may cause some damage, such as beads breaking, a thread catching and unraveling of a portion of the bag, or a stain may appear after something was spilled on the surface. Museums won't attempt to fix these problems, as repairs or restorations may cause more damage than originally present.

For museums to keep beaded bags in good condition for the longest time possible, conservators use acid free tissue, lightly stuffing the bag and paying close attention to the sides, where fabric is under the most stress. The bag is also kept slightly open so the metal findings won't rub together and create scratches on the surface where dust can settle in increasing the risk of corrosion. The bag is never hung by the chain, as this will cause stress to both the metal and the fibers.


Not to Worry: Prayer Beads, Rosaries and Talismans

These objects show diverse functions of beads and other artifacts used in ritual: to facilitate meditation, to count prayers, to express reverence and obedience, to provide protection from evil and to invoke healing powers. These objects show diverse functions of beads and other artifacts used in ritual: to facilitate meditation, to count prayers, to express reverence and obedience, to provide protection from evil and to invoke healing powers.

The use of beads to count prayers originated with the Hindus of India in the 6th century BCE. Indeed, the word bead is derived from the Anglo-Saxon word beade or bede and referred to prayer.

Tuareg jewelry is made of silver; a metal blessed by the Islamic Prophet, and is characterized as a protective symbolism. This khomissar talisman, of five diamond-shaped silver pieces mounted on leather, represents the five fingers of the hand. These five elements can also be made of shell.

A Koran verse or written messages by Moslem Holy Men on paper fragments is inserted into the recesses of the pendant. Such an item forms part of the gifts of jewelry presented to a Tuareg woman on her seventeenth birthday. Jewelry is traditionally an important part of the woman's dowry and an indication of a family's wealth and origin.


A Link with the Ancients: A Selection of Pre-Columbian Beads and Artifacts

A Traditionally, art in early civilizations developed inseparably out of the material expression of ritual and ceremonial rites. Societies, such as among the Pre-Columbian (pre 1492) people, function with a belief in the interrelationship of all living things.

A result of the belief in an animate universe, including the cosmos, is that the universe can be influenced by the physical act of mass representation (ritual / architecture / enormous sculptures) or, simply, creative expressions by individuals.

These ancient and Pre-Columbian objects can be better appreciated and valued when one has an understanding of the original owner's lives.

It appears that the objects worn by persons of these cultures were sedentary with physical and intellectual abilities in the cultivation of crops grown to sustain their lives. They lived in small communities practicing different ceremonies that honored their deities for providing the rain, sun and fertility of the earth to grow their food. Their lives were ruled by growing cycles. Artifacts of daily use were not only utilitarian, but were also beautifully adorned.

The viewer of these artifacts gains an appreciation of religion as art, ways of living as art, different ceremonies as art, and social and political organization as art.

In these communities all symbolic manifestations had the capacity to transmit energies from heaven to the earth and modify the earth if necessary for the people to survive. This process occurred through the power and significance of the arts. Art and life were inseparable entities.


A Womans Treasure: Bedouin Jewelry of the Arabian Peninsula

For ages past, Bedouin tribes have traveled throughout the vast expanses of the Arabian Desert, dependent on the seasons to feed their herds and sustain their nomadic existence. Along with the camels, the black tents, the pungent spices, and aromatic coffee, the traditional Bedouin caravan was characterized by the jingling of tiny bells, signaling a remarkable treasure belonging to the women of the tribetheir jewelry.

Bedouin women are given jewelry as dowry and wedding gifts, upon the arrival of children, for ceremonies and special occasions throughout their lives. These ornaments are a womans treasureher wealth, her savings account, her security, her possession. So honored were these objects, that even in times of battle, it was forbidden for rival warriors to loot a womans jewelry. The craftsmanship and design of the pieces reflect a variety of cultural references, including the geometric patterns of Arabian design and architecture, potent symbols of Islam, charms to ward off evil, intriguing religious amulets and the allure of adornment. The reference to Bedouin jewelry is in a sense misleading, since it is usually made by urban craftsmen rather than the Bedouin themselves. However, it is the Bedouin women who have sustained the tradition and trade of the jewelry: in some cases, a silversmith would travel with a particular tribe to make these ornaments for the women.

Over the past few decades, traditional Bedouin culture has diminished. Nomadic life is often no longer viable as people settle into cities and villages. Historically, a womans jewelry is melted down upon her death, and examples of original pieces are becoming almost impossible to find.

Drawing upon the collections of Frances Meade and Gabrielle Liese, A Womans Treasure: Bedouin Jewelry of the Arabian Peninsula features over one hundred pieces of jewelry, headdresses, earrings, bracelets, necklaces, coffee urns, incense burners and other artifacts from Bedouin life. This exhibit features some of the finest examples of traditional Bedouin jewelry, most of it collected during thirty years of Meades residence in Saudi Arabia.

 
   
 
 
©2006 The Bead Museum
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