Posted 5 years ago
kwqd
(1186 items)
This small vase is 4.5" high x 3" in diameter, by Mark Bokesch-Parsons. I have had this little vase for quite a few years. It is quite well done with interesting splashes of color. I found this in a thrift shop in the city where MBP attended University for his MFA, worked and resided from about 1990 until at least 2013. It is a modest piece and atypical of his later works which are good sized multimedia abstract sculptures for which he is best known. This piece is not dated, but could have been something generated during his MFA work or studio work made afterward to "pay the bills". He maintained a studio in the area for well over a decade.
https://www.wheatonarts.org/mark-bokesch-parsons/ (Probably out of date as it was written in 2003)
"Mark Bokesch-Parsons was born in Birmingham, England in 1967. He came to the United States in 1990 to pursue a Masters of Fine Arts Degree at Illinois State University in Bloomington/Normal, Illinois. Thirteen years later Bokesch-Parsons is still residing in Bloomington, Illinois where he operates a modest sculpture studio and teaches studio arts and art history at a local college. His artwork, which focuses on the investigation of the human form, is metaphorically autobiographical. Bokesch-Parsons chooses to place his figures in settings that are inclusive of natural, landscape or architectural environments to suggest positioning and a sense of connection. During his artistic career he has established strong working relationships with many nationally recognized galleries and he is represented in numerous private and public collections in both the United States and in Europe."
https://www.abebooks.com/Original-Oil-Painted-Kiln-Cast-Glass-Sculpture/16200771256/bd
"Mark Adrian Parsons, now Mark Bokesch-Parsons (he hyphenated his name when he married American photographer Charlene Bokesch), is a sculptor in glass, specializing in kiln-cast figures. British born, Mark Bokesch-Parsons has researched the human figure for many years. His cast sculptures are often painted and combined with other materials. He is represented by holdings at the Corning Glass Museum; Museum of American Glass, Wheaton Village, Millville, NJ; Kunstmuseum Dusseldorf, Dusseldorf, Germany; Frauenau Glass Museum, Frauenau, Germany; Kunstsammlunger Der Veste Coburg, Coburg, Germany; Glamuseum, Ebeltolf, Denmark; The Scottsdale Center for the Arts, Scottsdale, AZ; Rockford Art Museum, Rockford,IL; Muskegon Museum of Art, Muskegon, MI; Jones Museum of Glass and Ceramics, Sebago, ME; Hunter Museum of American Art, Chattanooga, TN; Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, PA; City of Bloomington Cultural District Headquaters, Bloomington, IL; Dr. Eva-Maria-Fahrner-Tutsek and Alexander Tutsek-Stiftung Glass Foundation, Munich, Germany; The Kotler-Coville Glass Pavilion, Florida State University."
Thanks Thomas, aura, fortapache, MALKEY and Jenni!
Thanks for looking at and loving my little studio glass bud vase Manikin, Karen, Ivonne, Vynil33rpm and Nicefice!
Thanks dlpetersen!
Thanks renedijkstra!
Thanks for loving my maybe soon to be identified vase iggy and Kevin! I located the wife of MBP and sent her an email. Hope she will forward it to her spouse.
Thanks antiquerose!
Thanks for taking a look at my studio art glass vase SEAN68!