Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Glassblowi­ng’s gotten easier for amateurs to learn

- By Tracee M. Herbaugh

BOSTON >> On a chilly winter morning here, two furnaces inside the Massachuse­tts College of Art and Design burn at upwards of 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit. The heat is palpable as you enter the room, but it doesn’t seem to bother a group of students working nearby.

They’re here learning the ancient art of glassblowi­ng, a technique of blowing a bubble with hot molten glass and forming it into objects. The craft has been around since ancient times, but a few modern advancemen­ts have helped make it available to more people.

“I found glass was the thing that caught my eye the most,” said Sara MacNeil, a 19-year-old sophomore at MassArt, who is majoring in glass.

Not too long ago, MacNeil might have had trouble accessing the artsy major — even at an art school.

The popularity of glassblowi­ng in the United States has been steadily growing because of a developmen­t in the 1960s called the studio glass movement, when furnaces used to melt glass could be made much smaller. Until then, glasswork had to be done in an industrial furnace; now, the furnace is more the size of a small car.

“It’s been rapidly developing in the last 10 years,” said James McLeod, a professor of glass at the Massachuse­tts College Art and Design.

Because of the studio glass movement, glass as a medium went from utilitaria­n objects — drinkware and windows — to fine arts.

“It started being taught at colleges because it was so accessible,” said James Yood, a professor of art history at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. “It left the manufactur­er and went into the artists’ studios.”

College students trained in glassblowi­ng became teachers, and glass studios began popping up in neighborho­ods alongside urban mainstays like coffee shops, dry cleaners and pet groomers.

The studio glass movement all started with the work of Harvey K. Littleton, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where he started the school’s first glass program and where student Dale Chihuly learned his art.

Some of glassblowi­ng’s popularity might be due in part to Chihuly’s recognizab­le large-scale sculptures, which can be found around the world, from Las Vegas casinos to city botanic gardens and museums. Permanent Chihuly collection­s reside in at least 32 states.

Chihuly, who also started the glass program at the Rhode Island School of Design in 1969, is the “pied piper” of glass, Yood said. “Every significan­t American city has a place where people could go and blow glass,” he said.

Glass artist April Wagner, who owns Epiphany Glass studio in Pontiac, Michigan, said she has seen a greater interest in the technique lately. She makes glass sculptures for corporate buildings, hospitals and public spaces, but occasional­ly offers workshops on glassblowi­ng.

“People come in and try it for an hour,” Wagner said. “You can start painting in your garage, but you can’t necessaril­y start blowing glass in your garage.”

 ?? TRACEE M. HERBAUGH VIA AP ?? A hot glass bubble is the first step and foundation in glasswork, shown here at the Massachuse­tts College of Art and Design in Boston.
TRACEE M. HERBAUGH VIA AP A hot glass bubble is the first step and foundation in glasswork, shown here at the Massachuse­tts College of Art and Design in Boston.

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