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Martin Rosol came to the United States in 1988 to pursue his career as a sculptor, a path unavailable to him in Czechoslovakia before Vaclav Havel and the Velvet Revolution transformed the country.

Rosol, like many Czech glassworkers, learned his trade in a company school set up to train craftsmen to execute limited edition designs for art glass manufacturers. Though the arrangement provided employment for many, it did not provide young artists with the degree required by the old regime to sell art. So Rosol, who had been designing and making sculptures while working in a glass factory, shipped his work out of the country. Before long, his sculptures were being exhibited in Europe and United States, and in 1981 he was awarded the Bavarian State Prize for Glass Sculpture in Munich. In 1986 he left Czechoslovakia for Austria and two years later came to the United States.

All of Rosol’s sculptures are made with several pieces precisely cut from blocks of crystal and constructed in architectural form after selected surfaces have been sandblasted. The range of translucence and the varied reflective surfaces, the clarity of crystal, and the icy gloss of sand-textured glass all create enclosed spaces within the polished structures. With their architectural forms designed to receive and contain illumination, they are indeed monuments to the light.

Artist Statement:

I come from a country with strong traditions in glass making, and my work is influenced by the many generations that came before me.  I appreciate the intrinsic qualities of glass that present themselves through my abstract sculpture.  Each piece is unique and takes advantage of the qualities of glass that I admire.

I am intrigued by the optical effects of glass that has been subtly curved and polished.  Light reflects and refracts through the glass and can be refocused in unexpected ways.  Hints of colors are embedded into my pieces, adding another dimension to the illusions they emit.  Minimal clean lines emphasize the clarity of the glass.  Elements of life can be confusing, lacking clarity, but as I polish glass I constantly work towards the clarity in the material that I also seek in life.

The Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, PA USA
Seven Bridges Foundation, Greenwich, CT USA
Fuller Craft Museum, Brockton, MA USA
The Corning Museum of Glass, Corning, New York USA
The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston ,MA USA
Museum, of Arts and Design ,New York USA
The Kanazawa Museum, Japan
The Moravian National Gallery, Brno, Czech Republic

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