Glass was born in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, and spent his childhood there and in Arizona.[2] The Native art Glass saw while living in Arizona instilled a love of native culture and art in him.
After graduating from IAIA, Glass returned to Oklahoma to work for the Cherokee Nation as an art program coordinator. He worked there for several years in the late 1970s.[4] During this time, Glass coordinated arts and crafts workshops for the Cherokee Nation, occasionally attended schools to share art with young students, and demonstrated art techniques.[4]
Art career
After working as art coordinator for several years, Glass turned to his own art full time in 1977.[3] Glass uses Georgia clay,[3] which allows him to fire at higher temperatures than locally sourced clays. Higher glazing temperatures then allow for a wider range of glazing colors. His work is inspired by the art of the Southeastern Woodlands people during the Mississippian era. During this era, Willard Stone (1916–1985) and Cecil Dick (Cherokee Nation, 1915–1992) served as Glass' mentors.
Glass exhibited nationally and garnered awards at the Santa Fe Indian Market, Heard Museum Guild Fair, Philbrook Indian Annual, Tulsa Indian Art Festival,[5] Cherokee Art Market, and Artesian Arts Festival.[6]
Bill Glass is the father of artist Demos Glass, and in the early millennium the father-son team began to build public sculptures together. The two share a large studio where they can craft their public pieces. The two convened Team Gadugi, an intertribal group of artists to create the public sculptural installation, The Passage (2003) about the Trail of Tears in Chattanooga, Tennessee.[3][7] Father and son also sculpted Touched to Above for the First Americans Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
The Five Civilized Tribes Museum in Muskogee, Oklahoma, named Glass a Master Artist in 1986.[5] In 2009, the Cherokee Nation named Glass as a Cherokee National Treasure.[1] The Red Earth Festival named him their Honored One in 2012.[9] The Tulsa Indian Art Festival named him their Honored Elder Artist in 2015.[5]
^ abPearson-Little Thunder, Julie (February 16, 2011). "Oral History Interview with Bill Glass Jr". Okstate Library Digital Collections. Oklahoma State University. Retrieved 11 September 2021.