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Tabasco - Glass Sculpture

Resurrect Studio

$7,000.00


“Tabasco” is a bold sculpture made from century-old landfill glass by Resurrect Studio, the collaborative practice of Nancy Wu and Jean Davis. Measuring 26 x 19 x 12 inches, the work features historic New York City landfill glass fragments shaped by more than a century of tide, sand, and time.

This vertical composition rises with striking energy, combining saturated red glass with vivid greens, deep blue accents, amber tones, and clear textured fragments. Layered and spiraling forms create a sense of upward movement, while the brilliant red panel anchors the piece with dramatic intensity.

Described by the artists as “3D watercolors,” Tabasco brings that idea to life with a fiery palette and intricate construction, transforming once-discarded glass into a vibrant sculpture of renewal, memory, and beauty.

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About Resurrect Studio

Resurrect Studio (Nancy Wu and Jean Davis, Co-Founders) creates sculptures from Victorian-era NYC landfill glass that collectively narrate a tale of hope and inspiration, blending elements of the sacred and the profane. They collect glass fragments decomposing in the bay that have been tumbling for a century. Depending on the tide, the inventory varies greatly like the catch of the day. Fragments are sculpted into “3D watercolors.” How has one generation’s garbage become another’s gemstones? What will our children be mining? Resurrect Studio’s non-traditional approach to glasswork is aimed at finding the transcendent in the everyday.

Nancy Wu and Jean Davis co-founded Resurrect Studio LLC in 2021. Nancy holds a Master’s in Architecture from the New Jersey Institute of Technology; Jean received a Master’s in Art Therapy, is a tenured professor at Pratt, and maintains a private practice. Their complementary artistic backgrounds fuel their collaborative practice. Resurrect Studio’s work has been exhibited nationally and internationally in various venues including The Venice Glass Week (Venice Biennale 2025) and the Brooklyn Museum, and featured publications such as New Glass Review and Glass: The UrbanGlass Quarterly. This award-winning duo invites audiences to see forgotten materials anew, illuminating what was lost and celebrating transformation, memory, and meaning.

Resurrect Studio