Fused Glass Horse Art on Blue

$135.00

The horses featured in this artwork were all wild horses photographed by Anjie during her time volunteering in North Dakota. While helping to train Bloodhounds she donated to the MHA Nation, Anjie and her husband, Travis, came across the wild horses while exploring the reservation on a rare day off. She later saw them again during a two-and-a-half-hour drive across the reservation, on her way to assist in the search for a missing young man.

Copper holds deep cultural and spiritual significance for the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara people. It is associated with healing, strength, and sacred connection to the earth. In honor of this meaning, Anjie thoughtfully incorporated copper into the piece.

Each of Anjie’s works is created by fusing mostly broken and recycled glass in a kiln—transforming discarded fragments into something beautiful and meaningful.

The horses featured in this artwork were all wild horses photographed by Anjie during her time volunteering in North Dakota. While helping to train Bloodhounds she donated to the MHA Nation, Anjie and her husband, Travis, came across the wild horses while exploring the reservation on a rare day off. She later saw them again during a two-and-a-half-hour drive across the reservation, on her way to assist in the search for a missing young man.

Copper holds deep cultural and spiritual significance for the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara people. It is associated with healing, strength, and sacred connection to the earth. In honor of this meaning, Anjie thoughtfully incorporated copper into the piece.

Each of Anjie’s works is created by fusing mostly broken and recycled glass in a kiln—transforming discarded fragments into something beautiful and meaningful.