Artist

John Lewis

born Berkeley, CA 1942
Born
Berkeley, California, United States
Biography

John Lewis enrolled at the University of California–Berkeley as a graduate student of architecture, where he was introduced to glassblowing by Marvin Lipofsky, the founder of the school's glass program. Lewis opened his hot-glass studio in Oakland in 1969, one of the first in the Bay Area. About ten years later, he received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts that led him to explore cast glass as a sculptural medium. He designed a furnace especially for casting glass and began experimenting, pouring liquid glass into forms of various sizes and shapes. Today, he creates cast-glass furniture pieces and decorative vessels. Lewis has collaborated with numerous artists and architects to create site-specific projects and memorials, most notably the Oklahoma City National Memorial, which commemorates the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building.

Works by this artist (3 items)

John Lewis, Untitled, 1975, glass, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Diane and Sandy Besser, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 2001.71.18
Untitled
Date1975
glass
On view
John Lewis, Untitled (Moon Bottle, Matte), 1975, glass, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Elmerina and Paul Parkman, 2000.106.11
Untitled (Moon Bottle, Matte)
Date1975
glass
On view