Lee
Brady is both an artist and a craftsman.
Lee earned his bachelor of fine arts, in 1977, at
the University of Saskatchewan. Lee began his adventure
into the world of glass, in 1980, when he opened Glass
Eye Studio in Saskatoon. He has sought many opportunities
for glass education and inspiration including a session
at the famed Pilchuck Glass School in 1989. Lee was
a founding member and president of the Saskatoon Glassworker's
Guild. The Guilds primary focus is to educate glass
artists through the sharing of ideas and support.
He was also a founding member, supporter and volunteer
of the Saskatchewan Craft Council, founded in 1975.
While exhibiting in the Saskatchewan Craft Council’s
annual juried show, Lee was awarded the ‘Elizabeth
Swift’ award for excellence in glass eleven
times in thirteen years. He has received numerous
SCC Merit of Excellence Awards and won the ‘Premier’s
Prize’ for outstanding entry in 1993.
During
the twenty one years that Lee has been working in
glass, he has taught many stained glass, fused glass
and glass design classes. He shares the Saskatchewan
Craft Council’s philosophy of developing excellence
in crafts though education and of creating a greater
awareness of crafts locally, nationally and internationally.
His architectural stained glass installations can
be found in many homes, churches and public sites
throughout western Canada. His flat (stained) glass
and fused sculptural glass has been exhibited in many
galleries across Canada and the US.
Artist’s
Statement
"Color
and construction have dominated my life. Growing up
in an urban industrial setting, I had as my playground
an auto painting shop on one side of our house and
a lumber yard on the other. I was trapped - and inspired,
I mixed chrome, wood and paint to form my childhood
fantasies. In some respects little has changed, I
now work in glass, metal and paint, but I am still
ever alert to the fantasy and the phenomenon of creation.
Discovering the pure colors alive in glass was a revelation
- colors that can institute, saturate and glow - colors
that can shift throughout the day and change intensities
throughout the seasons.
My
design work evolves like a conversation with a friend.
I initiate the idea. The form, color and texture suggests
a mood or application, or they challenge their role
within the design. I listen, learn and reply with
care. Thus, the dialogue proceeds. Perhaps this is
why I am never lonely in the solitude of my studio.
As the works develop character and presence, they
need less and less of me, until finally they separate,
exist on their own and leave me free to begin new
adventures.
The art of fine craft work deals with more than just
the mastery of the visual and tactile. It speaks of
the ideologies of the makers and of a community who
value the quality of the human touch. It revels in
the metamorphosis of ideas and material into objects
with are gloriously more than the sum of their parts.
I am increasingly fulfilled by playing a part in the
phenomenon of craft production."