Our newest resident artist in the Jasper Tiny Gallery is Olivia Pope, an artist with many hats who primarily works with stained glass. Pope is no stranger to visual arts – she has taught herself dozens of forms of art and creation over the years, such as watercolor, sewing, cosplaying, oil painting, crocheting, and more. Over the last four years, however, Pope fell in love with the art of stained glass.
“I was initially drawn into working with glass by an initial spark of inspiration from watching a game show where glassblowers compete with one another,” Pope says. “The hands-on nature and sheer intensity of the whole process is fascinating, and one I hope I get the chance to try one day. Shortly after looking into glass as a medium, I realized creating art with stained glass was more accessible than I originally assumed.” Pope got to collect the necessary tools to break into the foray of stained-glass work, all in the comfort of her own home.
The process of creating a new work of art with glass is both meditative and exciting for Pope. It is also extremely rewarding. The versatility and variations within each piece of glass provide unique challenges that she encounters every time she comes back to work on a glass project. Throughout a lifetime of working with various media, Pope typically would learn to create something by starting with the basics, then learning from mistakes, and eventually stopping when satisfied with the project altogether, keeping the medium in the back of her mind to return to for a potential future project. Working with stained glass felt different, however. “Every step of stained glass is its own challenge with varying difficulty levels,” Pope says. “No two pieces are the same, even if they are literally the same pattern. There is always something to learn, a trick to discover, an “a-ha!” moment.”
Pope’s life has been surrounded by the arts and she engages in them almost every day. If there was one moment to pinpoint as a catalyst for the arts continuing to shape her life, she recalls a moment from when she was an anchor vendor and artist in the former NoMa Warehouse. “I was chatting with a shopper who told me that the work that I was creating will become family heirlooms – valuable works of art that deserve to exist from generation to generation,” Pope says. “That comment struck me in such a way that completely reframed my thinking on so many levels. The reality that visual arts have become—and will become—the legacy of so many people, even me, is profound.”
Pope’s artwork is available for purchase through the rest of October. She also plans to donate 10% of her sales to hurricane relief.