Los Angeles Times

THERE’S ALWAYS LIGHT IN HERE

Stained-glass maker Judson Studios stays focused on the positive

- BY LIESL BRADNER

Tucked away in a rambling, twostory, shingle-and-stone structure in Highland Park lies the 123-year-old Judson Studios, purported to be the oldest family-owned and family-run stained-glass studio in America.

The work of Judson artisans graces Frank Lloyd Wright’s historic Ennis and Hollyhock houses in Los Angeles, the glorious 1932 First Congregati­onal Church of L.A. and the magnificen­tly restored octagonal Wilshire Boulevard Temple, not to mention hundreds of other houses of worship across the nation. Judson’s window for the Church of the Resurrecti­on in Leawood, Kan., the largest United Methodist congregati­on in the nation, has nearly enough stained glass to cover a basketball court.

Judson has endured two world wars, the Great Depression, 9/11 and the Great Recession of 2008. For David Judson, the fifth-generation family member who runs the operation, survival of all that adversity in the past provides some encouragem­ent for Judson Studios’ present: For the first time in its history, Judson Studios had to lay off the entire staff — all 23 designers, fabricator­s, installers, artists and painters — so they could apply for unemployme­nt following the coronaviru­s-related stay-athome orders. Judson said he hopes to get his people back to work as soon as it’s safe to return to the studio and projects can move forward again. The temporary closure came just as the studio was poised to celebrate a new book, “Judson: Innovation in Stained Glass” by Judson and Steffie Nelson, which chronicles the artists, architects and craftspeop­le who have created so much artistry over more than a century.

In 1897 William Lees Judson, a plein

air painter who had moved from Manchester, England, to L.A. for health reasons, launched the Colonial Art Glass Co. in downtown L.A. He also founded the Los Angeles College of Fine Arts, an important player in California’s Arts and Crafts movement and eventually part of USC. The school operated in a Highland Park building that was reconstruc­ted in 1911 after fire and now is on the National Register of Historic Places.

William Judson retired in 1920, the school moved to USC’s main campus, and the glass company — renamed Judson Studios — took over the Highland Park building. Most of the business that followed was ecclesiast­ical, projects such as All Saints Church in Pasadena, where Judson glass is installed alongside Tiffany windows in a century-old landmark, and St. James Episcopal Church in Koreatown, where traditiona­l stained glass from 1932 later was joined by a design incorporat­ing the image of Cesar Chavez.

When the lead that is so integral to the studio’s work became unavailabl­e during World War II, business slowed considerab­ly. But after 1945 the constructi­on of war memorials spurred demand for stained glass. So did the popularity of neoGothic churches. Judson Studios thrived.

When hard times came again in 1971 in the form of the 6.5-magnitude Sylmar earthquake, which destroyed Glendale Presbyteri­an, Judson Studios salvaged glass scenes so they could be reinstalle­d in a new chapel.

After the 1994 Northridge earthquake, Judson Studios helped churches across the region pick up the pieces — sometimes reconstruc­ting broken window designs using old photograph­s or drawings. David Judson said the company largely used the same methods for decades, working with outside artists to emulate the late 19th century Munich School style and planning out projects using full-size watercolor renderings created by hand.

In the early 2000s, the company started employing its own designers and artists in the studio, designing windows on computers. It began expanding into fused glass, where multiple pieces are joined in a kiln without lead borders, and into faceted glass, where pieces are held together by epoxy.

The 2008 recession led Judson to diversify the company and rely less on churches. Judson artist-inresidenc­e Sarah Cain recently revealed her first major public work: a 150-footlong stained-glass installati­on at San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport. Street artist and designer David Flores also collaborat­ed with the studio, incorporat­ing fused and leaded glass with silkscreen­ed enamels for a 7by-3-foot portrait, “The Muralist.”

But as the new book documents, Judson Studios has not abandoned its work in religious spaces. The Church of the Resurrecti­on project required 160 panels that took three years to complete at a cost of $3.4 million — a project so large that Judson built a second studio in South Pasadena to finish the work.

Judson’s monumental projects include the restoratio­n of the windows at the Air Force Academy Cadet Chapel in Colorado Springs, Colo., a deconstruc­ted Gothic cathedral with soaring spires that evoke a fleet of fighter jets poised for takeoff.

The chapel is 120 feet tall with windows that span that entire height. Completed in 1963 by Horace Judson, David’s grandfathe­r, the glass is being pulled out and the chapel disassembl­ed — a reconstruc­tion project aimed at fixing water leakage.

The Judson windows incorporat­e 24,384 pieces of faceted glass in a rainbow of colors. The $158-million project will take three to four years to complete.

Saul Shaw has been working at Judson Studios for 10 years, first as the lead cutter.

He scored glass with a tungsten tool and then finished breaking the fragments with his hands. Now he’s director of operations, fully cognizant of all the people around the world waiting for Judson to restart operations.

“Constructi­on is classified as essential, but making the windows is not,” said Shaw, who apprentice­d in Britain before moving to the States. “Back in England, all the churches are already built, so all the work is restoratio­n. Here, every day is different. We’re not cookie-cutter at all.”

When asked what he missed most, Shaw answered almost instantly.

“I miss being busy,” he said. “I go to work and the day’s over before you know it.” He and his coworkers take pride in their jobs. Now they’re just hanging around waiting to start again, though he’s quick to acknowledg­e that at least they have customers willing to wait for them.

“We’re one of the fortunate trades,” he said. “In the long run we’ll be fine.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Dania Maxwell Los Angeles Times ?? JUDSON STUDIOS’ David Judson studies designs at the Highland Park facility. The company is temporaril­y shuttered for the first time in its 123-year history.
Photograph­s by Dania Maxwell Los Angeles Times JUDSON STUDIOS’ David Judson studies designs at the Highland Park facility. The company is temporaril­y shuttered for the first time in its 123-year history.
 ??  ?? WORK is suspended during stay-athome, but a quick ramp-up is expected.
WORK is suspended during stay-athome, but a quick ramp-up is expected.
 ?? Photograph­s from Judson Studios ?? JUDSON STUDIOS’ monumental windows for the Church of the Resurrecti­on in Leawood, Kan. Such work is documented in a new book.
Photograph­s from Judson Studios JUDSON STUDIOS’ monumental windows for the Church of the Resurrecti­on in Leawood, Kan. Such work is documented in a new book.
 ??  ?? DAVID FLORES worked with Judson on “The Muralist”; part of it is seen here.
DAVID FLORES worked with Judson on “The Muralist”; part of it is seen here.

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