Artists > Brent Kee Young

Brent's work has been featured in 21 Museums around the world incuding Birmingham Museum of Art, AL; Carnegie Museum of Art, PA; Cleveland Museum of Art, OH; Columbia Museum of Art, SC; Contemporary Glass Art Museum of Alcorcón (Madrid), Spain; Corning Museum of Glass, NY; High Museum of Art, GA; Hokkaido Museum of Modern Art, Japan; Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum, WI, Milwaukee Public Museum, WI, Museum of American Glass of Wheaton Arts and Cultural Center, NJ; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA; Museum of Fine Art, NM; New Orleans Museum of Art, LA; Niijima Contemporary Glass Art Museum, Japan; North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, NC; Racine Art Museum, WI; Smithsonian American Art Museum Renwick Gallery, Washington, DC; Telfair Museum of Art, Savannah, GA; Toledo Museum of Art, Glass Pavilion, OH.

Video of Brent Kee Young Process

Brent Kee Young, glass artist and Cleveland Institute of Art Professor (currently on sabbatical,) has been recognized by scores of museums, galleries, colleges and universities in the United States and Asia, which have displayed and acquired his work and invited him to speak, demonstrate and teach. In 2006, the Smithsonian American Art Museum’s Renwick Gallery acquired its second piece by Professor Young for its permanent collection. “Amphora … Save” is from Professor Young’s Matrix Series, a construction of intricate and technically complex works he created by flame working boro silicate glass rods into layers of glass webs. Also in 2011, Professor Young was selected to receive a most prestigious Creative Workforce Fellowship, generously supported by the citizens of Cuyahoga County, Ohio where he lives and works.

Professor Young has conducted numerous workshops in the U.S. and Asia including at The Niijima International Glass Art Festival, Niijima, Tokyo; the International Glass Art Society Conference, Seto, Japan; Grand Crystal, Peitou City, Taiwan, ROC; University of Miami, Coral Gables; Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville; University of Kentucky, Louisville; and California Polytechnic University, San Louis Obispo. He has served as a juror for The National Endowment for the Arts and lectured at the Smithsonian Institution's Renwick Gallery. In 1990, Professor Young was selected as head of glass at Aichi University of Education, Kariya, Japan where he was responsible for establishing the studio, designing and implementing the curriculum and teaching the first glass program in a National University in Japan.

"Bi....Cong," Matrix Series
Borosilicate Glass
33" x 34" x 12.5"
"Shelter"
Borosilicate Glass
16" x 16" x 37"
"Cottonwood Diaries"
Borosilicate Glass
38" x 23" x 13"
"Random Tessellations"
Borosilicate Glass
17" x 11.5" x 7"
"Essence of Study," Cubism I
Glass
27" x 27" x 27"