The New Brunswick Arts Board is an arm’s length arts funding agency with a legislated mandate to facilitate and promote the creation of art as well as administering funding programs for professional artists in the province.
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Home » News » Blog » FEATURED ARTIST SERIES – Sheryl Crowley
FEATURED ARTIST SERIES – Sheryl Crowley
Orsoni “Master in Mosaic” Workshop in Venice, Italy
The amazing
part about being in Venice is BEING IN VENICE. Here you experience a heightened
reality. Roads of churning water. Grand architecture and tiny cafes tucked in
corners. Artistic expression every street you turn onto. I came to Venice for 1
week in October to learn an ancient mosaic technique and to work with the crème
de la crème of mosaic materials- Orsoni Smalti. The Orsoni Furnace (the word
“Furnace” is used in Venice to mean where the entire glass making process takes
place) is a centuries old, walled compound. Within the walls is a beautiful
hostel/office, the actual furnace (the only open flame furnace allowed now in
Venice), the Library of Colour (floor to ceiling shelves and shelves of glass
slabs) and a small building housing the spaces for teaching and cutting the
smalti glass. The rectangular chunks of Smalti are shipped to the Sagrada
Familia in Barcelona, among other places. These work areas are surrounded by
gardens, patios and everywhere the stacked drums used in the furnace to melt
the glass ingredients. The drums are encrusted with dripping layers of molten
colour. This is where I was fortunate enough to take the Orsoni “Master In
Mosaic” Workshop for 5 days in October 2019.
Antonella
Gallenda led me and three other women in the techniques associated with using
smalti glass and the traditional hammer and hardie tools. These tools and
materials have been in use for hundreds of years going back beyond the
Byzantine times. We had free reign in choosing our colours from the Orsoni palette
including the gold leaf smalti they are known for. I had never used hammer and
hardie – an embedded chisel point that you hold the smalti onto while striking
it with the sharp edge of the half-moon shaped hammer. Sounds easy enough but
while I struck and crushed many a piece, Antonella could succinctly cut one
small rectangle of glass into many even, tiny slivers. Smalti mosaics are not
grouted. The surface of a smalti mosaic is generally uneven due to the uneven
nature of the hand poured glass slabs that the smalti is cut from. Therefore,
the cut fragments, known as Tesserae, must be placed directly up against each
other with as little space between them as possible. Cutting and placing
becomes very important if you wish the design to be effective and the mosaic to
be cohesive. Antonella worked alongside us, instructing as needed, for 5 days,
9-5.
The design I
had worked on at home ended up not being the one I used. A week before leaving
I had photographed some horse chestnuts (conkers) that I had picked up near my
home. I brought one of these photos with me and it was this that felt right to
work with. The spiky exterior shell of the seed seemed to call for the nubbly
textured gold smalti that Orsoni makes. Antonella encouraged us all to add gold
to our pieces. We all joked that if we did not have enough gold in our pieces
that Antonella might refuse us our course certificates. The finished piece is
16” x 12”, much of that taken up by the chestnut image. The 5 days of the
workshop brought me to the completion of the chestnut itself. Antonella helped
me gather glass to bring home so I might do the background back in NB.
International travel with a still drying mosaic is a challenge in itself. No
smalti was harmed in the making of this journey. The chestnut came home intact.
Looking back at the time at Orsoni, from a vantage point of several months later, what I value most about the experience is the immersion in the atmosphere and daily running of the Furnace. In the next room there were women cutting rods of smalti into small rectangles with chisel like hand tools, keeping up a constant banter in Italian and occasionally singing to the radio, calling out to the man in the next small building whose job it was to take the cooled slabs of glass and hand slice them into rods for the women to take. Across the walkway from our room, were large open containers piled high with brilliant coloured fragments, leftovers from the process. Inside the flaming furnace area three men took turns stirring the molten glass batter with long spoons, scooping out spoonfuls and pouring them onto a metal slab that would roll the liquid glass like pastry dough. One of the men played “air guitar” on his 6ft. long spoon as I filmed him working. We wandered through the 10-12ft (?) high shelves of the library of colour, surrounded by thousands of slabs of brilliantly hued glass. All of this will stay with me. Thank you, artsnb for the Career Development Grant, and for helping me to have this experience.
As a provincial entity, the New Brunswick Arts Board acknowledges that it carries out its work on the traditional unceded territory of the Wolastoqiyik, Mi’kmaq and Peskotomuhkati peoples. Read the full statement.