Dale Chihuly

@Glass Sculptor, Timeline and Childhood

Dale Patrick Chihuly is an American artist and entrepreneur, known for his unique and marvelous works with glass

Sep 20, 1941

AmericanUniversity Of WashingtonArtistsMiscellaneousVirgo Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: September 20, 1941
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Glass Sculptor, University Of Washington, Artists, Miscellaneous
  • Spouses: Leslie Jackson (2005–current), Sylvia Peto (1987-1991)
  • Known as: Dale Patrick Chihuly
  • Universities:
    • University Of Washington
  • Notable Alumnis:
    • University Of Washington

Dale Chihuly born at

Tacoma, Washington

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Birth Place

In 1987, he married playwright, Sylvia Peto but later got divorced in 1991.

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Personal Life

In 2005, he married Leslie Jackson and they were blessed with a boy, Jackson Chihuly.

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Personal Life

He was born on September 20, 1941 in Tacoma, Washington to George Chihuly, a meatpacker and union organizer and Viola Magnuson Chihuly, a homemaker.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1957, when he was in high school, his brother died in a flight training accident in U.S. Navy. A year later, his father died of a heart attack at the age of 51.

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Childhood & Early Life

The deaths of his brother and father left him in despair and sadness. His mother encouraged him to pursue his studies sincerely. He graduated from Woodrow Wilson High School and got enrolled at the College of Puget Sound in 1959.

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Childhood & Early Life

He was transferred to the University of Washington in 1960 from where he completed his Bachelor’s degree in Interior Designing in 1965.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1967, he received his Master of Science in sculpture from the University of Wisconsin-Madison under the guidance of Harvey Littleton, a glass artist and educator.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1969, he was hired to start a glass department in RISD where he was able to artistically mould the glass and perform experiments on glassblowing. He encouraged his students to create new designs and objects using molten glass.

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Career

In 1971, he founded the Pilchuck Glass School near Stanwood, Washington with the help of John Hauberg and Anne Gould Hauberg. He loved to experiment with the use of glass in different and unconventional ways.

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Career

In 1976, he encountered a career-altering incident, which caused blindness in his left eye. But he was not discouraged at this loss; instead his conviction of producing artistic designs through the use of glass was deepened.

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Career

In 1979, after he gained some respect among critics and audiences for his work, he suffered another blow to his career. He dislocated his shoulder and was not able hold the glassblowing pipe, a technique which he mastered all his life.

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Career

As he was no longer able to practically work on glass, he employed a skilled team of blowers for this work and focused his mind on designing new set pieces under his supervision. When asked about his role at that time, he described it as "more choreographer than dancer, more supervisor than participant, more director than actor".

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Career

In 1995, he traveled with a group of 30 glassblowers to some of the finest cities of the world and created assemblages of giant chandeliers for the canals of Venice. This masterpiece created an awe-inspiring demonstration of light bouncing from the water to the glass and back again.

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Major Works

He did the work of glass ceiling at Bellagio casino in Las Vegas.

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Major Works

One of his spectacular works was his exhibition ‘In the Light of Jerusalem’ at Israel’s Tower of David in 2000.

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Major Works

In 2011, he created the ‘Chihuly Garden and Glass’ in the Seattle Center Park for his exhibitions, which opened for public in 2012.

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Major Works