Farrell, Matthew

Alchemical Collection no2

Alchemical Collection

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Bio

MATTHEW FARRELL creates works in glass that are the result of an intense exploration of the contemporary possibilities and expressive potential of this fascinating and ancient medium.

One of Australia’s premiere young glass artists, Farrell is able to bring a fresh and unique perspective to his work through experience gained in both flame-worked and furnace-worked glass.

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Farrell, Matthew

MATTHEW FARRELL creates works in glass that are the result of an intense exploration of the contemporary possibilities and expressive potential of this fascinating and ancient medium.

One of Australia’s premiere young glass artists, Farrell is able to bring a fresh and unique perspective to his work through experience gained in both flame-worked and furnace-worked glass. A professional lamp worker since 2000, Matthew has benefited from close, creative associations with two of Australia’s most celebrated glass artists, Colin Heaney & Noel Hart, and is a regular contributing artist at Kirra Galleries’ Glass on Flame exhibition, the annual showcase of Australia’s finest lampworking artists.

In 2007 Matthew further expanded his creative possibilities through the purchase of the glass blowing studio formally owned by Colin Heaney. Here Matthew works with a small team of highly skilled glass craftsmen to create his stunning and distinctive pieces.

Philosophy and practice
It was while working with Hart (who had formally been a painter) during the early development of his ‘parrot series’ that Matthew began to explore the expressive potential of glass beyond its inherent decorative quality.

An accomplished musician specializing in instruments from India, Matthew believes that, like music, glass art combines the seemingly contrary elements of improvisation with an exacting mind-body synthesis. The liquidity of hot glass and its manipulation with a hand tool in a circular fashion means it is sensitive to the slightest variation in centrifugal forces. By necessity you cannot approach working with glass with anything other than a single-minded concentration.

Focus, concentration, creativity: all must come together at once, even in the working of the simplest forms. ‘It makes little difference whether I make a small decorative piece or a large-scale sculptural form, the mindset is always the same,’ Matthew says. ‘It is this need for the constant return to focus that has always sustained my passion for glassblowing.’ But it is also the ability of glass to outwit time that fuels Matthew’s ongoing fascination with the medium. Glass, he says, is frozen only to human space-time parameters, it ‘remains liquid, always flowing on a molecular level, though it moves only fractions of millimeters across the expanse of a millennia’. It is this concept that has fascinated Matthew and, for him, places glass alongside music as ‘the physical manifestation of a deeper spiritual quality flowing through our lives.’

“Both sublime and powerful, glass is a material infinite in possibilities”.

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