We are saddened by the passing of Ginny Ruffner, a truly visionary glass and mixed media artist who was awarded the Glass Art Society’s 2019 Lifetime Achievement Award. “Ginny Ruffner’s long career in glass is nothing short of inspiring,” said Brandi P. Clark, GAS executive director, “From her first lampworked sculptures to her innovative work with glass and Augmented Reality, Ginny was a pioneer in our community who will be greatly missed.”
Born in Atlanta, Georgia, Ruffner graduated with honors from the University of Georgia with an MFA in drawing and painting. During her MFA program, Marcel Duchamp’s Large Glass, The Bride Stripped Bare By Her Bachelors, Even (1915-23) inspired Ruffner to paint directly on glass to allow light through her paintings, thus sparking her lifelong career in glass. Like most glassmakers of her generation, Ruffner was self-taught. She began lampworking at a small shop in Atlanta and used her wages from that job to set up her own studio and begin experimenting with the material. Ruffner was an established glass expert specializing in lampworked boxes decorated with flora and fauna when she moved to Seattle in 1984 to be an instructor at Pilchuck Glass School. At Pilchuck, she was a modern Prometheus, introducing borosilicate to the campus and becoming the first woman to produce art glass sculptures in boro.
From there, Ruffner continued a prolific career spanning six decades with over 100 solo and group exhibitions, and her work is represented in over 40 museum collections around the world, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, NY), the Corning Museum of Glass (Corning, NY), and the Seattle Art Museum (Seattle, WA). Ruffner’s work was characterized by her overwhelming curiosity about the world; many bodies of her work question “what if” as she imagined fantastical natural phenomena like “what if lightning bloomed into a flower?” She used her imagination to push the boundaries of material, combining glass with metal, drawings, Augmented Reality, pop-up books, and more.
As an early member of GAS, she presented at several conferences, contributed several articles about GAS to art publications, and served as GAS Board President from 1990–1991. In recognition of the innovation she brought to our community, Ruffner was awarded the 2019 Lifetime Achievement Award at the GAS conference in St. Petersburg. During her presentation, she was joined on stage by longtime friend Laura Donefer as they provided an entertaining and broad view of Ruffner’s extensive career in glass. Ginny’s joie de vivre, determination, imagination, and passion will be missed.