When: 
Friday, March 4, 2016 - 12:10pm - 1:00pm
Where: 
Oechsle 224
Presenter: 
Glen Cook, Chief Scientist, Corning Museum of Glass
Price: 
Free

Glen Cook's talk is rescheduled to Friday, April 8,  noon, Williams 108.

The expressive power of glass as an artistic medium has roots in the material’s fundamental chemistry and physics. Cook will discuss how, over 3,500 years, humans have harnessed extreme temperatures to transform humble rocks into masterpieces of color, clarity, and form, and into the high-tech devices so ubiquitous in today’s culture.

Glen Cook became chief scientist for The Corning Museum of Glass after 16 years at Corning Incorporated as a senior research associate, conducting research in inorganic materials processing and composition. As chief scientist at the CMOG, Cook is responsible for researching and sharing scientific and technical topics in glass. He informs exhibitions, programs and publications, and also serves as a technical resource for the broader museum community, museum guests and the general public, as well as artists working in glass today. In 2013, Cook’s outstanding record was recognized with Corning Incorporated’s prestigious [Donald] Stookey Award for cutting-edge exploratory and applied research, as well as in recognition of being the named inventor on more than two dozen patent applications. Cook is also the technical advisor to the new Specialty Glass Artist-in-Residence program that is jointly managed by Corning Incorporated and The Corning Museum of Glass. Cook holds a PhD and MS in metallurgical engineering from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a BS in materials engineering from the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology.  

Dr. Cook's visit is presented in conjunction with the "Tiffany at Lafayette" exhibitions. 

Sponsored by: 
Lafayette Art Galleries, Special Collections, Departments of Art, Chemical Engineering, and Chemistry; the IDEAL Center for Innovation; and Division of Engineering.

Contact information

Name: 
Michiko Okaya ; Diane Shaw
Phone: 
610 330 5361 / 5401
Email: 
artgallery@lafayette.edu, archives@lafayette.edu
Parent event: