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German-born glass artist Klaus Moje created his own aesthetic language and his legacy as a teacher continues to influence Australian artists.
In 1966, after driving over 3000 kilometres from Germany to Amman, Jordan to work on a stained glass restoration project, Klaus Moje made a short detour south to do some diving at the coastal town of ...
Klaus Moje leans against a bench in front of the quartet of large glass rectangles that make up his work "The Portland Panels: Choreographed Geometry," a bold and intricate swath of art that hints ...
Klaus Moje is regarded as the father of Australian glass art. He achieved early fame during the 1960s and 1970s in Germany and the United States, and then in the early 1980s he was brought to ...
Artist Klaus Moje, who founded the Glass Workshop at the Australian National University School of Art, has died at the age of 79 after a few months of ill health.
Three rectangular glass art pieces hung near the entrance of Montpelier Cultural Arts Center explain the basics of turning glass into art. "Recycle," a series of works by Seattle's Richard LaLonde ...
There is a magic to glass as an art form so espoused to celestial light it seems to have been created from the auras of angels. The way glass is made, in itself, seems like alchemy, or a seemingly … ...
View full size Toledo Museum of Art Harvey Littleton's "Blue/Ruby Spray," 1990, exploits the flowing, liquid properties of glass to create a crownlike arrangement of curving, abstract forms.
The key figure in the second storyline is German glass artist Klaus Moje, who in 1979 was invited to Pilchuck Glass School by Dale Chihuly.
LACMA chose several works by notable glass artists — including Michael Glancy, Klaus Moje, Ann Warff Wolff, Richard Marquis and the duo Libensky and Brychtova — to show the artists’ evolution.
Klaus Moje is regarded as the father of Australian glass art. He came to Australia from Germany in the 1980s to establish the new glass workshop at the Australian National University. Today a ...
Rare is the artist who is a "living treasure." But Klaus Moje is one of them -- at least in Australia, the country to which the German-born artist moved in 1982. Moje is a glass maestro but not ...
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