Late glass artist Ruth Brockmann composed the glass mask "Return of the Ivory-Billed Woodpecker" with bright, colorful forest and bird imagery. This fused glass piece was created in celebration of the Ivory-Billed Woodpecker's escape from extinction. The mask has an acrylic display mount suitable for stand or wall mounting.

Artist Ruth Brockmann (1955-2013) was a leader in the Northwest kiln-formed glass movement. She created fused-glass sculptures that celebrated and explored our spiritual connection to the natural world.

Ruth Brockman was one of the initial artists in the 1980s to work and experiment with Bullseye Glass Company's colored glass for fusing. She taught glass fusing at the Pilchuck Glass School in Stanwood, Northwestern Washington, as well as around the United States and Canada. Her experimental, do-it-yourself art practice was heavily influenced by her experiences farming in Alaska and Washington, working on commercial fishing boats, traveling in Mexico, and Mother Nature.