The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Dishing up a lesson in beauty

Glass art is de rigueur. Gayle has a smashing time at one of glass artist Rachel Bower’s fantastic workshops

- with Gayle Ritchie

It is bold, beautiful, reminiscen­t of seaside holidays and, get this – I made it myself! As I lift the glass bowl out of the kiln – where it has been fired for three days – it catches the light and the marine design springs into life.

The foil fish inside seem to swim freely, the blue and turquoise waves dance, and the sea spray shimmers and shines. Okay, so perhaps I’m getting a bit carried away, but such beauty inspires poetry, even at the most basic level.

When I say I made the bowl myself, what I mean is that I made it with a lot of help from glass artist Rachel Bower. Rachel, 45, creates stunning fused glass pieces using a combinatio­n of fine materials, genius and more than a dash of inspiratio­n.

I signed up for one of her fab workshops in the hope of coming out with something unique, and despite my lack of artistic skill, my beloved bowl turns out beautifull­y.

“A lot of people believe they’re not arty or creative and say they can’t draw or paint, but there’s so much more to glass art than that,” says Rachel.

I’m glad to hear that because any artwork I ever produced at school was pretty tragic, a mural of a wounded hand striking a gong and a painting of a wallowing hippo aside.

Today is a lot more crafts-oriented and I’m spurred on by the fact a twoyear-old girl made a glass dish with Rachel a few days earlier, though she did attempt to ingest it. I start off with a transparen­t circle of sheet glass for the base of the bowl and cut a selection of abstract fish shapes out of thin copper using a craft knife.

I add eyes, fins and mouths to a few of my fish using a pen, and arrange them in a loose spiral shape to suggest a shoal.

Rachel then shows me how to cut coloured strips of glass, which I struggle with initially; a few shards break off prematurel­y.

Using a glass cutter and pliers, I then create a series of gently curving wave shapes in various shades of aqua, turquoise and sky blue glass.

I arrange these over the surface, overlappin­g in places to create a variety of subtle shades and tones using mosaic cutters to shape and refine the glass.

I then added frit (smaller pieces of crushed glass) in opalescent white, cyan and turquoise to give the effect of water drops and foam. All the glass is held in place using a glue that will burn off cleanly in the kiln.

My design is then “capped” with another transparen­t circle of class to hold the fish shapes in place.

We then move the bowl into the glass kiln, which Rachel tells me will heat my creation to 805c.

“The glass will become viscous like honey, the sharp edges will round off and individual pieces will flow together,” explains Rachel.

“This will create a glass disk which will then be fired over a ceramic slump mould to 750c, enough to soften the glass and allow it to fall into the mould and assume its shape.”

I wait three days for my bowl to fire and then return, full of anticipati­on for the big reveal.

“Kiln work changes things so you might be surprised by how it looks, although hopefully delighted!” says Rachel. “I find real magic in glass fusing; I enjoy the way temperatur­e changes a material.”

Opening the kiln, I’m bursting with excitement and am bowled over (excuse the pun) by my creation– it’s absolutely stunning!

Being naturally clumsy, I worry I’ll drop it as I return to my car, but Rachel assures me it’s fairly robust, although she recommends not throwing it on a tiled floor.

So what to do with it? “You could put fruit in it, or maybe wine?” suggests Rachel. “Many people just keep it as something to look at.”

I’ve yet to decide what to do. The bowl seems too gorgeous to be hidden by plums and apples. For now, it takes pride of place on my kitchen table.

As well as bowls, Rachel makes clocks, jewellery, cake stands, glass for the garden, decoration­s and more, as well as running family-friendly events.

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 ?? Pictures: Steven Brown. ?? Clockwise from below: Rachel watches Gayle start work on her bowl; Gayle’s finished piece; waves are glued into place; the bowl is ready for the kiln.
Pictures: Steven Brown. Clockwise from below: Rachel watches Gayle start work on her bowl; Gayle’s finished piece; waves are glued into place; the bowl is ready for the kiln.
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