Price: $45.00

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Whether you flamework, fuse, or work at a furnace… glass breaks! But why? Is it Thermal Shock? Bad Annealing? Or Incompatibility? How can you tell? How can you avoid it?

In this day and age, we tend to lean on numbers. We trust them blindly and without understanding. For instance, do you trust the COE of your  glass to determine compatibility? Most of us do. But we’re wrong!

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COE (Coefficient of Expansion) is only half of the story. If you want to know the other half, want to learn how to really determine if different glasses will play together and stay together, then this lecture is for YOU!

Join Henry to gain a fuller picture of how glass behaves. With your new-found understanding, you will be in a much better position to determine compatibility and have better outcomes.

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Henry Halem has been working in glass since 1968. He holds a BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design and an MFA from George Washington University and did post graduate work at the University of Wisconsin. Halem went to Kent State University to start their glass program in 1969 and retired from teaching glass there in 1998 after 29 yrs. He now devotes himself to working full time in his studio as well as trying to lower his golf handicap. Halem, along with a few other artists, founded the Glass Art Society and served as its first president.

In 2008 Henry received the prestigious “Lifetime Achievement Award” from the Glass Art Society at its annual meeting in Portland, Oregon. Henry is a Fellow of The American Crafts Council and in 1994 Received the Governor’s Award from the State of Ohio. In 1998 Halem received the President’s Medal for Outstanding Achievement from KSU. He has exhibited extensively throughout the U.S., Europe, and Japan. His work can be found in important major collections in both the private and public sector. In 1997 the Cleveland Museum of Art acquired two of Halem’s works which are now included in their permanent collection. Other major museums where his work is collected include the Corning Museum, Smithsonian Institution, Toledo Museum, Detroit Institute of Art, High Museum of Art in Atlanta, the Philadelphia Museum of Art and internationally at the Hokkaido & Niijima Museums in Japan and the Museum of Decorative Arts in the Czech Republic.

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