A High Tea at Café Zoo in Drysdale on
Monday 7 January will launch the 2019 Festival of Glass Treasure Hunt.
"Owl" Marina Villani (Birds of the Bellarine) |
High
Tea guests can watch local glass artist Glenda
MacNaughton blowing and sculpting glass and browse the “Birds of the Bellarine”
glass art exhibition that runs until March.
The High Tea was booked out two weeks in
advance and, not surprisingly, owner Marc Rodway is delighted. “It will be a great start to this
year’s Festival of Glass and to its Treasure Hunt”, he said.
Thirty three businesses in Curlewis, Drysdale, Clifton
Springs and Portarlington are involved in the Treasure
Hunt, which has over a hundred prizes of locally-made glass art.
Treasure
Hunt organiser Diane Schofield said, “New businesses join the Treasure Hunt
each year, generally because they’ve heard good reports from other businesses
who’ve been involved”.
2019 Festival biggest yet
The
Treasure Hunt is the first event on the 2019 Festival of Glass calendar, which
also includes an Expo with 45 exhibitors, the annual Glass Art Awards and
demonstrations and classes by renowned glass artists Davide Penso (from Murano,
Italy) and Karina Guevin and Cédric Ginart (both from Montreal, Canada).
“The Festival’s visiting artists have
international reputations for excellence”, said Festival coordinator Doug
Carson. “Their classes enable glass artists in Australia to develop their abilities
without travelling overseas and their spectacular public demonstrations
introduce audiences to the beauty and skill of glass art.”
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