Catching Light: Selections from the Wichita Art Museum’s Burnstein Collection

Sep 23, 2021
Issue 3593

About This Exhibition

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Dr. Robert Burnstein, a Detroit psychiatrist, began collecting glass in the 1980s. He was attracted to American glass of the 19th and 20th centuries because, as he stated, “it was a time when handcrafted expertise and precision craftsmanship were the benchmarks of the American glass industry.”

Soon he came to find that among American companies, the glass produced by Steuben was unsurpassed in quality, color intensity, and breadth of design.

Therefore, he focused his collecting first on Steuben, then on candlesticks in particular. He concentrated on candlesticks given their elegance of design and great variety of their colors and decorative techniques. Dr. Burnstein has presented his collection in honor of his parents, Donald and Arlene Burnstein.

Artist Charles Lotton

I was sorry to hear of the passing of Charles Lotton. He was part of the American Studio Glass Movement where artists worked independently of glass factories. Charles was not trained in the making of glass. He built a studio and furnace in his back yard and then taught himself to make beautiful glass. How amazing is that!

Karen Beeman, President Carder Steuben Club Glass Association

Mark Your Calendar

Next year’s symposium will be held at the Corning Museum of Glass in Corning, NY on September 8-10, 2022.

Symposium 2024
Carder Steuben Glass Association
20-21 September 2024
© Carder Steuben Glass Association Inc.