Klaus Moje AO (5 October 1936 – 24 September 2016) was a German born, Australian glass artist and educator.
After a brief time as a German folk singer, Moje opened a stained glass studio with Isgard Moje-Wohlgemuth.
Moje's background as a glass cutter came to the fore as he had to carve away the contaminated surface to reveal the colour he desired.
The school, started by Dale Chihuly, was geared mainly toward glassblowing, but Moje gave a talk about his recent fused glass works.
Schwoerer and Lundstrom were intrigued by the work that Moje was producing and invited him to the factory (really just a house in SE Portland).
The intricacy and vibrance of Moje's work at the time demonstrates the effect of his close collaboration with Bullseye and Dan Schwoerer in particular.
Moje pushed the material in more expressively painterly ways and Bullseye met him those challenges by developing new colours with more capabilities.
This collaboration culminated in 2007 with a series of panels that were created as the centerpiece for Moje's retrospective exhibition at the Portland Art Museum.
In 2006, Moje was made an honorary Officer of the Order of Australia for service to the visual arts as a glass artist.
This work was created at the Bullseye Factory and was constructed from thousands of hand cut strips of glass, each panel measures 6 × 4 feet.