This workshop, led by Elizabeth Kent, introduces participants to the art of verre églomisé mirrors, where gilding and painting meet on the reverse side of the glass to create exquisitely delicate mirror effects. Through preparing the surface, applying gold or silver leaf, creating designs, and mastering the interplay of transparency, each participant learns to compose unique pieces that blend brilliance, depth, and artisanal precision.
Between traditional techniques and contemporary exploration, this immersive experience allows participants to design a fully personalized verre églomisé mirror, revealing the richness of a rare and timeless craft.
Upon completion of the training, the trainee will be able to:
This four-day immersion opens the doors to a luminous craft: the art of verre églomisé, a technique whose brilliance has endured through the centuries. Originating in Roman antiquity and reinvented in the 18th century by the gilder Jean-Baptiste Glomy, who gave it his name, the practice involves applying gilding and paint to the reverse side of the glass to create shimmering and vibrant surfaces. Long associated with the most refined decorative arts, it is now experiencing a resurgence of interest among contemporary designers and artisans, captivated by its ability to sculpt light.
Throughout the sessions, participants discover the essential techniques: preparing the surface, creating the "size," applying gold or silver leaf, and burnishing to achieve a perfect mirror finish. They also explore the nuances between water gilding and oil gilding, two techniques with distinct textures and effects.
The practice extends into graphic work where each participant composes their own visual language. Stencils, masks, and brushes allow for the creation of patterns and overlays, playing with transparency, depth, and contrasts. In these successive layers, the artisanal gesture engages with chance, intuition, and the subtle variations of the material.
The finishing touches—textures on the gilding, paints applied to the back, and protective varnishes—reveal the full richness of the decoration. At the end of this process, each participant designs a unique églomisé mirror, a personal piece where technical heritage, precise gesture, and creative freedom converge. It's a way of inhabiting centuries-old knowledge and projecting it into a resolutely contemporary aesthetic.
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Skills acquired, questions, and approach to more complex projects
Based in London, British artist Elizabeth Kent creates a universe where glass becomes landscape and light, raw material. By combining glass and reflective metals, she composes mirror-like works of almost alchemical precision, available as unique pieces and limited editions. Her creations, inspired by natural forms, play with reflectivity to produce subtle optical effects that transform space and invite the viewer to a sensory experience of reflection and landscape.
Trained in sculpture at Chelsea School of Art, Elizabeth Kent quickly established herself in the British art scene. Her work has been exhibited in prestigious museums, galleries, and art fairs, including the Victoria and Albert Museum. At the crossroads of contemporary art and fine craftsmanship, she regularly collaborates with the luxury hospitality sector, where her mirrors become installations in their own right, revealing the atmosphere of a space as much as they shape it.
Since 2022, she has also been sharing her expertise in verre églomisé, an ancient technique whose language she renews with understated elegance. Through her teaching as well as in her studio, Elizabeth Kent cultivates a single ambition: to create works where craftsmanship, light, and material unite to give birth to mirrors that not only reflect the world, but reinvent it.
Price(s) including the cost of training, accommodation and full board, materials and personal protective equipment.