Bruce Metcalf

Bruce Metcalf (born September 30, 1949 in Amherst, Massachusetts) is an American artist who uses different materials including wood, metal, and plexiglass for his works.[1]

Education

He received his B.F.A. in Crafts/Metalsmithing in 1972 at Syracuse University. He also majored in Architecture at Syracuse from 1968-1970. From 1972-73 he attended Montana State University and from 1973-74 attended State University of New York at New Paltz. In 1977 he received his Master of Fine Arts in Metalsmithing and Jewelry at Tyler School of Art at Temple University.

Professional experience

Grants, fellowships and awards

Selected museum collections

Writings

  • Crafts: Second Class Citizens?, in Metalsmith magazine, 1980.
  • Crafts New Borderland: A Grass Roots Movement of Handcraft is Taking Hold[3]
  • The Meaning of Making, Catalogue essay for "Craft as Content: National Metals Invitational", Emily Davis Gallery, The University of Akron, Ohio 1987.
  • On the Nature of Jewelry, in Jewelry Australia Now. Craft Australia Series Publication, 1989.
  • Replacing the Myth of Modernism, in American Craft, February/March 1993, Volume 53, Number 1.

References

  1. "Bruce Metcalf". Smithsonian American Art Museum. Retrieved 2019-09-29.
  2. http://www.pcah.us/fellowships/artist-profile/grantees-1996-bruce-metcalf/
  3. Metcalf, Bruce. Craft’s New Borderland. “Metalsmith,” vol. 30, no. 1, Mar. 2010
  • U. Ilse Neumann, American Studio Jewelry Movement - Créateurs de bijoux américains du XXème siècle, in "Bijou, Objet, Corps. In-corporer", L'Harmattan, 2008, ISBN 978-2-296-07029-5
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