Orlando Sentinel

Glass wildflower­s fool bugs, wow fans

- By Ryan Gillespie Staff Writer

Sometimes even bugs and butterflie­s think Ronnie Hughes’ glass-sculpted flowers are real.

“We get a lot of confused insects at my booth,” said Hughes, of North Carolina. “They’ll camp out on some of my pieces, and I know I’m frustratin­g them because there’s no scent to my flowers.”

Amid about 200 artists at Winter Park’s annual Sidewalk Art Festival, Hughes’ handtorche­d collection of wildflower­s garnered the eyes of many of the 350,000 expected to flood Park Avenue.

The festival is known as one of the largest and highest quality in the state, bringing more than 200 artists from across the nation.

For Hughes, who crafts vibrant wildflower­s with a torch that melts glass at a scorching 3,000 degrees, the Winter Park show is among the most competitiv­e he attends.

When he was a child, Hughes, 62, said his mother would drag him to her flowerbed to help her work. But it wasn’t until he went for a hike years later as an adult that he appreciate­d the flowers’ beauty. He stumbled across a patch of about 200 rare lady slippers in full bloom and knew he had to try to make his own.

“I really didn’t like digging holes or weeding or anything like that, so when I started doing wildflower­s, it was like the spirit of my mother coming through,” Hughes said.

The show also hands out 63 awards, worth approximat­ely $72,500, to artists.

Judges selected a piece by Richard Currier called “Best Horizon 2018” as its Best of Show winner.

It was purchased by the art festival board, who will donate the piece by the Micco-based painter to the City of Winter Park.

The art festival board purchased the Micco-based painter’s work for

$10,000 and donated it to the City of Winter Park. Then it will be displayed alongside past winners in the Winter Park Public Library.

Currier said his style is hard to explain but has led to him winning the distinctio­n at about a dozen other shows.

“I focus primarily on the space between the trees, the water and the sky,” Currier said. “So it’s not so much the subject itself, but painting the atmosphere.”

Heidi Thampert, a photograph­er from Titusville, won the Edyth Bush Charitable Foundation

Award. The board purchased her piece titled “Long After I’m Gone” for $5,000. Jim Parmentier, from North Carolina, won the Morse Museum Award for Distinguis­hed Work of Art for clay-piece dubbed “Bulbous Vessel.”

Ocoee-based sculptor Katherine Mathisen was one of 10 artists to receive the $2,000 prize for an Award of Excellence.

Judges lauded her piece “Companions,” which is a rust-colored depiction of more than a dozen people looking in various directions.

“It’s about how we’re all here together in this time and space, and we’re all companions whether we like it or not,” she said.

For Hughes, a trip to Florida means a chance to see orchids and other flowers he doesn’t often see in his home in the mountains of North Carolina.

Perhaps the flowers will influence future creations.

“I just have a wealth of inspiratio­n,” Hughes said, “All I have to do is go for a walk or go to a botanical garden. I get all sorts of ideas for new flowers to do.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY SARAH ESPEDIDO/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Artist Ronnie Hughes creates intricate glass sculptures of vibrant wild flowers with a torch that melts glass at a scorching 3,000 degrees.
PHOTOS BY SARAH ESPEDIDO/STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Artist Ronnie Hughes creates intricate glass sculptures of vibrant wild flowers with a torch that melts glass at a scorching 3,000 degrees.
 ??  ?? Ronnie Hughes created this sculpture, titled “Lola’s Garden,” in honor of his late mother.
Ronnie Hughes created this sculpture, titled “Lola’s Garden,” in honor of his late mother.

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