A different kind of trip
Bongs try to cross over into mainstream art world
Call it high art. A pop-up gallery in the Chateau Marmont features a display of handblown art-glass marijuana paraphernalia — and the price tags run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Grey Space Art, at the hotel through Oct. 5, is the brainchild of a 22-year-old New Yorker, Benjamin Milstein, who said he amassed cash after investing in cannabis stock in 2013 two weeks before it became legal in Colorado. That sparked an interest in functional glass art in the form of bongs and pipes and prompted him to travel the world, including Japan, the Netherlands, Britain and Spain, to buy sculptural works.
In two years, Milstein collected more than 500 pieces by about 80 artists.
“I felt the functional glass industry had momentum,” he said. “And I wanted to make relationships with these artists to take them from the underground world of the small, niche cannabis community to the mainstream art world.”
Milstein started Grey Space Art in June 2016 in New York. The initial focus was on exhibiting, not selling, the glass works; but Milstein then “got serious” this May; he has since sold about $350,000 in bongs, he said.
Milstein expects Los Angeles to be interested in his cannabis art: “L.A. is definitely more liberal leaning than New York. The people here are always willing to see the new trends and share what they think is cool. It’s a very reflective place. And I think on the West Coast, we’ll have the best ability to grow the perception of this medium as fine art.”
Of course, there’s a long history between art objects and mind-altering substances such as marijuana and hallucinogens. The ancient Egyptians used ritualistic, decorative smoking pipes; and in the late 19th century, absinthe inspired scores of artists and authors. In the early 1970s, a glassblower named Bob Snodgrass sold his art pipes in the parking lots of Grateful Dead concerts, sparking a “functional glass art” movement of sorts and earning him the nickname “the godfather of glass.” As recently as 2012, Brazilian painter Fernando de la Rocque used pot smoke and stencils to create delicate works on paper. There’s even a comic book hero, Ziggy Marley’s Marijuanaman.
Milstein’s collection continues in this tradition, bringing together the most prolific and established artists working with art glass bongs. The exhibition will feature 25 bongs by about 30 artists, with prices ranging from $5,000 to $300,000.
“Mother Nature’s Gun,” by the duo Robert Mickelsen and Calvin Mickle, is a multicolored AK-47 with leaves, butterflies and larva bullets; the “Hayabusa Satellite,” by Washington state’s Sagan, is an elaborate white satellite disc sculpture housing shimmery dichroic bits.
The work that costs $300,000 is an intricate, hollow sculpture, “Vahana,” by artists Banjo and Phil Siegel. The foot-wide piece depicts a glowing, translucent orange alien reclining on a hammock-like seat. When it’s in-use, smoke visibly flows through the alien’s body, giving it an ethereal, almost psychedelic quality.
The price point largely has to do with the artists, Milstein said.
“Banjo is one of the bestselling artists in this medium. He’s been doing this for more than 20 years. He’s an extraordinary artist. Phil Siegel is also very well known and respected,” Milstein said. “And the work itself is definitely a marquee work among their collaborations; and it’s pretty large scale.”
But will anyone actually shell out that much cash for an especially pretty bong? Milstein is certain there’s a collector base for the works.
“These pieces are very liquid, meaning you can find a collector to buy high-end pieces by one of these artists — the top of the top — pretty easily within the cannabis community,” he said. “But I’m trying to reach out to a new market. This is a collectible medium by highly skilled glass artists. And just like graffiti art 20 years ago, this is a young medium that’s growing, and people should get in now.”
The pieces may be considered functional glass art within the industry, but for Milstein, art comes before function. “The whole goal is to showcase these artists, sometimes very highly trained and who have been blowing glass for many years or even decades,” Milstein said. “All the pieces I sell are more art pieces than functional. They’re using the bong as their underlying shared vision, they’re all coming from the cannabis world, but towards spreading their art.
“When someone visits the gallery, I want to take them on a journey. I want them to have an experience.”
A pretty dope one, at that.