BORIS BALLY
DPW Brooch Tri

$35.00

Boris Bally
DPW Brooch Tri | Red, White + Black
100% recycled traffic sign, two tie tac style pin backs
2H x 2W x .125D inches
Item #236-27

1 in stock

SKU: 236-27 Categories: , Tags: , ,

Artist Info

BORIS BALLY
Providence, RI

METALS | Sculpture, functional objects and furniture

Penland Affiliation | Penland instructor 1998, 2001, 2016

Artist Information | Studio artist; education: Intensive Goldsmith apprenticeship (Switzerland), Foundation and Metals Program at Tyler School of Art and Design (PA), BFA Metals, Carnegie Mellon University (PA); lectures: Keynote presentation at Ferris University (MI), Society North American Goldsmiths (Boston Conference); exhibitions: Uneasy Beauty: Discomfort in Contemporary Adornment (Fuller Craft Museum, MA), We The People: Serving Notice, American Museum of Ceramic Art (CA), Crafted Visions: Tension of Opposites (Patina Gallery), Guns, Violence, and Justice (National Metal Museum, TN).

Artist Bio | Boris Bally is a Swiss-trained metalsmith/designer working in Providence, RI where he maintains his small studio business, Bally Humanufactured, LLC.

Bally’s work has earned him the 2015 Rhode Island Council on the Arts Fellowship in Craft as well as two RISCA Design Fellowships. He also received a Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Crafts Fellowship. Bally won First Prize from the International Green Dot Awards for his Broadway ArmChair design in 2012. In 2013 he was a finalist in both Eco Arts Awards and the 2009 International Spark Design Awards. In 2006 Bally received an Individual Achievement Award for Visual Arts presented by the Arts & Business Council of Rhode Island. His work has been featured in numerous international exhibitions and publications. Public collections include London’s V&A Museum, Museum of Fine Arts Boston, Museum of Art & Design New York, Carnegie Museum of Art Pittsburgh, Brooklyn Museum, Luce Foundation Center, Renwick Gallery and Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum. Art, Brooklyn Museum, Renwick Gallery and Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum.