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Best in Show

SYLVIA LEE’S LATEST LINE EXPLORES THE GAPS IN RECOLLECTI­ON THROUGH COLOURFUL ARTISANAL GLASS

- WORDS _Elena Sénéchal-becker

How the vestiges of memory inspired Sylvia Lee’s trio of vibrant glass side tables

To say that Designto 2021 was a bit unusual would be an understate­ment. Undeterred by the prospect of limited viewership and the logistics of manufactur­ing during the COVID-19 pandemic, Sylvia Lee, executive and creative director of Toronto glass-blowing atelier Jeff Goodman Studio, took the opportunit­y to work on a project close to her heart. The result is a two-part collection of circular side tables and wall art, dubbed Telescope, that explores the vestiges of her past. “As I get older, I realize that I’m losing my memory,” Lee says. “But I have all these snippets from my childhood, from my youth.” The individual telescopic glass shapes (or “views,” as she calls them) home in on those that Lee holds especially dear. “I remember skating with my family when I was five,” she adds. “But I don’t remember learning to skate. These fond memories make my person now, but there’s also a void.”

Though originally trained in furniture design, Lee quickly fell into glass-blowing while studying at Sheridan College. Since then, she’s accumulate­d some 20 years of experience with the medium, and has now spearheade­d the practice for almost a decade. The studio’s signature Chroma glass product — which bore the idea for Telescope — is made by pulling coloured glass rods into long, tubular shapes prior to placing them into a kiln in different configurat­ions to form a flat panel. For Lee’s striking showpieces, the individual units of Chroma were presented together in a haphazard circular arrangemen­t of carefully layered hues reminiscen­t of the horizon at dawn.

Ranging in size from 30 to 50 centimetre­s, the nine wall pieces are enclosed in brass mounts and arranged on a blank white surface — meant to signify the “void of memory,” she says. The trio of standout tables, meanwhile, came later. With the 40-, 50- and 60-centimetre­diameter designs, Lee hoped to showcase the beautiful edge detail of the glass atop a telescope-inspired brass base. Previously obscured by the brackets of the wall elements, the colourful profile forms a nebulous motif recalling both the haziness of a night sky and the accumulati­on of experience­s. “For me,” she says, “each piece of glass, each view, is a snippet of memory.” jeffgoodma­nstudio.com

 ??  ?? Among Sylvia Lee’s Designto offerings was a bold trio of side tables composed of chromatic glass and brass.
Among Sylvia Lee’s Designto offerings was a bold trio of side tables composed of chromatic glass and brass.
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