"In his elegant yet strangely disturbing
series of Persians, Dale Chihuly courts the
miraculous," writes Robert Hobbs in his
essay "Dale Chihuly's Persians: Acts of
Survival" in the catalog accompanying the
1988 exhibition curated by Henry
Geldzahler for the Dia Art Foundation on
Long Island. Hobbs suggests that the
series alludes to the "romance of ancient
Persia, which Iran's new Islamic Republic
is now rejecting". The
deaths of his father and only brother
within 18 months of each other
"impressed upon him the precariousness
of life," and Hobbs sees this expressed in
the Persians that give "voice to the
accidental and serendipitous nature of
life." The traveling exhibition traced the
development of the series from the first
peculiarly shaped forms with their
irregular surface designs to the
sophisticated and exotically patterned
mature works. Reproductions of
Chihuly's glass and drawings and images of the artist at work
with his team along with statements by
the artist illuminate the evolution of this
series first shown in the Louvre.
1986 Softcover, 8" x 8"
32 pages, 24 color reproductions
ISBN 0-9608382-8-7