Cat kaley McCarroll

A bit about me

I studied fine art with a concentration in printmaking at Kent State University.  Thinking I was just fulfilling a requisite,  I took an art history course on decorative arts.  It turned out to have a great influence on me.  ( Thank you Sheila Tabakoff! )  After many years I rediscovered verre eglomise (reverse painting and gilding on glass) and took a class from Frances Federer.  Fast forward, and here I am in San Francisco working in a pre-roman technique in the 21st century.  I stand on the shoulders of great artists and artisans, blending art and craft.

Influences

The natural world

I draw on my extensive world travel.  From the Tibetan plateau to the depths of the Indian ocean, nature, landscape, and the creatures that share this planet have been my greatest inspiration.

Victorian avant-garde

The mix of decorative arts and fine arts that blossomed during the 1850s . They blurred the line between fine art and craft.  The line I like to walk.  Their celebration of beauty.  Their use and understanding of pattern.

Iznik pottery

The sophistication, abstraction and color astound me!

Charlie Harper

His playfulness with his subject matter is equal to his ability to distill, to strip away all that is unnecessary.

Mark Rothko

His refinement and meditative seduction.

HISTORY OF ​VERRE EGLOMISE

 

Verre églomisé, from the French term meaning gilded glass, is a process in which the back side of glass is gilded with gold or metal leaf.

The gilding may also be combined with reverse painting on glass.

The technique dates back to the pre-Roman eras, but its name is derived from 18th century French decorator and art-dealer Jean-Baptise Glomy (1711–1786) who is responsible for its re-popularization.

One of the key historical periods of the art was in Italy during the 13th to 16th centuries. Small panels of glass with designs formed by engraved gilding were applied to reliquaries and portable altars.

It has also been used throughout Europe since the 15th century, appearing in paintings, furniture, drinking glasses and similar vessels and jewelry. It is also often seen in the form of decorative panels of mirrors, clock faces, and in more recent history, as window signs and advertising mirrors.

detail from peacock