Michele Oberdieck
Michele Oberdieck doesn’t just work with glass; she coaxes it into bloom. A former textile designer turned glass artist, she brings a painter’s sense of color and a sculptor’s instinct for form to each hand-blown vessel. Her ombré glassware feels botanical, but not in a literal sense—more like the memory of a flower, or a petal caught mid-whirl. Trained and based in London, she’s drawn to the dance between fragility and strength, transparency and saturation. Swirls of pigment stretch across the curved surfaces of colored glass vases, each piece entirely one of a kind.
Michele Oberdieck doesn’t just work with glass; she coaxes it into bloom. A former textile designer turned glass artist, she brings a painter’s sense of color and a sculptor’s instinct for form to each hand-blown vessel. Her ombré glassware feels botanical, but not in a literal sense—more like the memory of a flower, or a petal caught mid-whirl. Trained and based in London, she’s drawn to the dance between fragility and strength, transparency and saturation. Swirls of pigment stretch across the curved surfaces of colored glass vases, each piece entirely one of a kind.