Sonja Blomdahl


Sonja Blomdahl is an American blown glass artist.

Education

Blomdahl began glassmaking as an undergraduate student during the 1970s. She earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in ceramics from Massachusetts College of Art in 1974. There she studied with glass sculptor Dan Dailey. In 1976 she spent six months studying at the Orrefors glassworks in Sweden, and her work is sometimes associated with Scandinavian design. Venetian glass master Checco Ongaro taught Blomdahl the method of double-bubble blowing, for which her work is well known.

Career

In 1978, Blomdahl served as a teaching assistant at the Pilchuck Glass School for Dan Dailey, where she first watched Checco Ongaro demonstrate the incalmo technique. She has held teaching positions at the Pratt Fine Arts Center in Seattle; Haystack Mountain School of Crafts in Deer Isle, Maine; and the Appalachian Center in Smithville, Tennessee. Blumdahl's first solo exhibition was at the Traver Sutton Gallery in Seattle in 1981. She opened her own studio in Seattle in 1983, which remained open until 2009. Since the late 2000s, she has moved beyond the symmetrical glass vessels she is known for and worked increasingly with architectural forms.

Collections

2001 U.S. State Dept. Gift, presented by President Bush to the Prime Minister of Sweden

1987 Artists' Trust Fellowship Grant, Washington State

1986 NEA Visual Arts Fellowship Grant