Linda MacNeil


Linda MacNeil is an American artist specializing in contemporary jewelry that combines metalwork with glass and sometimes precious stones to create miniature sculptures.

Education, influences and characteristics of the work

MacNeill was born in Framingham, Massachusetts, a suburb in greater Boston, and studied at the Philadelphia College of Art, the Massachusetts College of Art and received her BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1976. She was introduced to glassmaking at the Massachusetts College of Art where she also met her husband, glass and metal sculptor Dan Dailey. She has taught in glass and sculpture programs including the Pilchuck Glass School, Haystack Mountain School of Crafts, Massachusetts College of Art and Design, Boston, Philadelphia College of Art, Waterford Crystal and the Miasa Center and Niijima Glass Art Museum in Japan.
MacNeil sets great store by the "wearability" of her pieces as well as on perfect execution. In 2002 a book was published, United in Beauty: The Jewelry and Collectors of Linda MacNeil with portraits of eighty women wearing pieces created by MacNeil. In the introductory essay, notes: 'Like Olaf Skoogfors and Toni Goessler-Snyder before her, she can claim to be a constructivist whose passion for geometric forms allows her to create works that are compositions in themselves - independent of the wearer.'
Kate Dobbs Ariail writing in Metalsmith about the Mint Museum of Craft & Design's exhibit; "Sculptural Radiance: The Jewelry and Objects of Linda MacNeil" notes that "MacNeil evidences an unusually nuanced appreciation of her material. Her use of a variety of types of glass, along with various finishing techniques, gives her an unexpectedly broad palette of hue, value, tint and reflectivity, so that her crisp design takes on a painterly tone." Commenting on the same exhibition, Joan Falconer Byrd, professor of art at Western Carolina University, notes that 'MacNeil commands an extensive vocabulary of metal fabricating techniques.' For much of her career, MacNeil favored brass that she then had electroplated with gold.
MacNeil individually casts and hand carves or otherwise manipulates each of the glass elements in her neck pieces, ear rings and brooches. Art Jewelry Today published in 2003, identifies MacNeil as a pioneer in the use of glass in contemporary jewelry, while making reference to historic precedents. An interview with Macneil in 2013 on Art Jewelry Forum references her interest in Art Deco, specifically the work of René Lalique.
One of the glass making techniques Linda employs is lost wax casting with pâte de verre to create intricate shapes with great surface detail. Her work was chosen as an example of this technique, which was very popular in the nineteenth century Art Deco movement, by Jeffrey B. Snyder in Art Jewelry Today 2
Other pieces use polished Vitriolite, a dense, opaque, industrial glass made prior to the 1940s, often in pieces that are a reinterpretation of Art Deco; some, such as the Lucent Lines series, use acid-polished glass with gold connecting rods drilled through using the visual distortions of glass to create shifting geometric patterns. Some rigid collars from the late 1980s and early 1990s were inspired in part by Bronze Age Celtic neckpieces and Egyptian jewelry while others again reference the Art Deco period.

Examples

Series, start date

Many of the series have persisted and developed over several decades
Primary source