Art Glass Lemon by Effie Burns
This is a stunning piece of art glass, lemon by Effie Burns is just divine. Cast from a real lemon using the burnout process. A process that ensures every detail of the lemon is captured. The clear base of the lemon is polished to a high sheen, creating a window into the centre.
The Lemon offers wondrous yellow shadows in natural and artificial light. A fun art glass lemon that intrigues on its own but is a perfect partner for the other fruit in this series, a lime!
N.B. The images shown are an example of the ones in the series. Each art glass is handmade and therefore there will be small variations in colour, shape and pattern. Each one is unique and signed by the artists.
Art Glass Lemon Artist
Based in Whitby, North Yorkshire, Effie Burns looks to capture the transient beauty of nature. Having completed a BA (Hons) in 3D Design (glass with ceramics), at the University of Sunderland. Effie went on to complete a Master’s in Art in Context. Between 2004 and 2007 she became a visiting lecturer for the MA Glass course at Sunderland University. In 2016, Effie completed a Fellowship with the National Glass Centre in Sunderland.
Effie can be found scouring the ground, searching for the small detail that makes up nature. Pinecones, conkers, mushrooms and those small but significant articles that all form part of our living world. Working with the magical process of glass transformation and the early properties of glass Effie looks to distil nature into something else.
Effie likes to cast these small reflections of nature, looking to reproduce the intimate details of the object. Using the cast glass method her extraordinary pieces are then presented in glass domes or antique boxes.
Part of Effie’s childhood was spent living in a museum and since then she has been fascinated by how things are protected, curated and displayed. A Queen Elizabeth Scholarship Trust award allowed Effie to develop her making skills in 2012.
Effie’s sculptural work has been in several international exhibitions, including, in shows with Contemporary Applied Arts in London and the Crafts Council in Tokyo. Various private collections in the UK and Europe also hold some of her work.
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