About

Bill LeQuier has evolved from a traditional studio glass blower to a sculptor of unique glass art. His style and form have changed several times over the years; yet there is an underlying continuity in his focus and development process that puts his current work in context with his work of years past.

LeQuier graduated Southern Connecticut State University (SCSU) in 1975 with a BS in Art Education. While a student, LeQuier participated in the glass blowing program introduced at SCSU in 1973. At that time small studio glass blowing was in its infancy and SCSU was one of the first schools in Connecticut to include the medium as part of its art curriculum.

In 1976, LeQuier and his wife Mary Angus, in partnership with two other glass artists, established Bittersweet Glassworks, a glass blowing studio in Branford, CT. In 1983 LeQuier and Angus moved their studio to Readsboro, VT.

After years of blowing art glass vessels, LeQuier began to experiment with sandblasted surface designs. "I was intrigued with the sandblasting process. I found that I could carve the glass to generate a myriad of textures similar to natural erosion." Over time his sandblasted geometric patterned vessels evolved to organic sculptures carved in relief from blown glass forms.

"My experimentation with varying depths of carving combined with different resist materials yielded unexpected and exciting results and gave me new directions to explore." Inspired by the diversity in form and color of undersea creatures, many of these works were reminiscent of sea urchins, sponges, anemones and their environments.

LeQuier's appreciation of the strength and serendipity of nature has moved his work in a new direction. While observing stacks of salvaged glass shelving, he began to think of a different way to work with glass. He saw the raw material for a series of sculptures that were multi-layered constructions. Inspired by quickly rendered sketches, LeQuier is able to transform a mundane material to organic forms conveying movement and emotion.

Free flowing strands of carved glass are laminated with other layers to create depth and a complexity of intersecting lines. These sculptures of fluid motion vividly represent a momentary event in nature.

Awards

  • 2007 Award of Excellence
    Habatat Galleries 35th Annual Awards Exhibition

  • 2006 Award of Excellence
    Habatat Galleries 34th Annual AwardsExhibition

    Publications

  • American Craft, Feb.1983

  • American Craft 47 , 2  “Glass of the 80’s”, Robert Kehlman,  Apr-May 1987, p. 33 (ill.)

  • American Crafts, Katherine Pearson, 1983, p.181 (ill.)

  • American Studio Glass 1960-1990, Martha Drexler Lynn , 2004, p. 130 (ill.)

  • Architectural Lighting, “Silent Light for a Private Gallery” Gareth Fenley, June 1989, p. 40 (ill)

  • Contemporary Crafts and the Saxe Collection, Davira S. Taragin, Toledo Museum of Art 1993, p. 51 (ill.)

  • Contemporory Directions: Glass from the Maxine and William Block Collection, Sarah Nichols and Davira S. Taragin, 2002, p.30 (ill.)

  • Contemporary Glass, A Private Collection, Benjamin Heineman, 1988, p.20 (ill.)

  • Glass: a Contemporary Art, Dan Klein, 1989,  p. 43 (ill.)

  • Glass Art: 112 Contemporary Artists, Barbara Purchia and Ashley Rooney, 2016, p.120,121, back cover (ill.)

  • Glass: State of the Art, Ferdinand Hampson, 1984, p. 75 (ill.)

  • Insight: A Collectors Guide to Contemporary American Glass, Ferdinand Hampson, 1985, chapter 11 (ill.)

  • New Glass Review #4,6,16, Corning Museum of Glass

  • Works in Glass, Ferdinand Hampson, 1986, cover (ill.)

  • 25 Years: Glass as an Art Medium, Ferdinand Hampson and Thomas Boone, 1987

 

Teaching Experience

  • 1989  Penland School, Penland, NC

  • 1987  Penland School, Penland, NC

  • 1979  Southern Connecticut State University, New Haven, CT