• Gallery
  • Originals
  • About
  • Case Studies
  • New
  • FAQs
  • Public Art
  • Contact
  • Menu

Heather Hancock

Glass + concrete
  • Gallery
  • Originals
  • About
  • Case Studies
  • New
  • FAQs
  • Public Art
  • Contact

VISTA shoreline

May 06, 2024

This new piece reimagines a familiar view—the shimmering shoreline of Lake Michigan. Inspired by the bold abstraction of VISTA: Grasslands, the clients requested a “Chicago version” with a similar palette and stylized interpretation for their corporate office. Layers of glass capture the lake’s movement and light, creating a dynamic, reflective surface. Set within an LED-lit frame, the piece glows, amplifying its depth and energy. The result is a striking fusion of nature and city, distilled into a luminous, contemporary composition.

VISTA shoreline 5’ x 3.5’ glass inlay + concrete c Heather Hancock 2024 | photo credit Grayhaus Studios

If you know me, you know I love living near Lake Michigan. I take every chance to walk or paddle. I am endlessly fascinated by the palette of blues, grays, whites, creams…and then there’s all the sunrise drama out there.

VISTA shoreline 5’ x 3.5’ glass inlay + concrete c Heather Hancock 2024 | photo credit Grayhaus Studios

I loved creating this super shimmery version of our shoreline. The edged panel hangs within a frame of LED lighting for extra shine. LOVE!

 

detail Vista: shoreline

detail Vista: shoreline

Vista: shoreline 5’ x 3.5’ glass inlay + texture c Heather Hancock 2024

 

WIP | cutting glass

WIP | cutting glass

WIP | cutting glass

Progression of an idea from inspo image to final sketch.

inspo pic with diagonal shoreline | Lake Michigan

 

sketch v1 HH

 

sketch v2 HH

 
 
 

sketch | VISTA: shoreline c Heather Hancock 2024

Vista: shoreline 5’ x 3.5’ glass inlay + texture c Heather Hancock 2024

Prev / Next

Newsletter

Thank you!

Instagram

A 3-panel commission for an elevator lobby in a historic adaptive reuse development in Denver. Inspired by the iconic Evans School (built 1904 in Classical Revival style by David Dyden), the work layers architectural motifs in amber, gray, and cream&
A stairwell installation designed to shimmer as people pass—layers of green and blue glass suggest ‘digital rain,’ with content and rhythm tailored to the client’s business. Abstract but with encoded meaning, this 3-panel work
A new direction in material minimalism. These warm gray, monochromatic pieces focus on texture and tone-on-tone inlay.. A quiet, tactile approach to biophilic abstraction—designed for contemporary residential interiors.
.
ELEMENTAL | 20”

Latest Posts

New
Case study feature | reception area
about a month ago
From Studio to Skyline: New Work Headed to Hudson Yards
about a month ago
Headed to New Jersey: A New Installation for a Healing Space
about a month ago
Resilient | contrasts in texture and reflectance
about 2 months ago