Cuisine

A LIGHT TOUCH

TRACY WHITMEY meets a young artist creating playful glass art.

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Tracy Whitmey finds beauty in an artist’s blue glass banana

I’M BEMUSED BY my visceral reaction to Devyn Ormsby’s glass fruit. I’m intrigued by its glow, by the tiny bubbles encased within, by the perfect dimple in its base. Slightly disconcert­ed by a blue banana, my thumb strokes the rough end on the stalk where it looks as if it’s just been pulled off the bunch. I trace the outline with my fingertips, cup the weight in my hand – the pieces look light and dainty, yet pick them up and they have quite a heft.

“Fruit is a very familiar form,” Devyn says, “so it’s something pleasing, yet surprising at the same time. And the blue colour and the banana are the most surprising.”

As she explains the lengthy and, to me, very complicate­d technique of lost-wax casting I’m concentrat­ing hard on silicon moulds, microcryst­alline wax, plaster, glass billets, tooling and cold work, yet my hand keeps snaking out to caress the glowing green pear on the table. The delicacy of the sculptures bely the nuggety methods of their making as Devyn describes smashing the glass billets with a hammer, laughing at my horrified expression at a video of her divesting – attacking the plaster mould with a huge saw, hacking away to release the glass form inside.

The lost-wax casting technique enables Devyn to replicate exactly the tiny details of each original piece of fruit, right down to the dimpled texture of mandarin and lemon peel. These are glass-working techniques she learnt in her day job, working in a glass studio in Auckland.

Lacking very many peers as the glass industry in New Zealand is small, she travelled to Seattle in July 2019 to attend a three-week summer session at the

Pilchuck Glass School. “It was really cool to meet other young people that are really into glass. In New Zealand the skills haven’t really been passed on and there are few places to learn. I love seeing things and thinking ‘How do they make that?’ and I loved seeing how it’s made by masters.”

And, more recently, Devyn is just back from a trip to Prague where she spent time at the Lhotský Studio in Železný Brod, learning in this busy workshop which makes large pieces such as artist Karen Lamonte’s life-size cast-glass dress sculptures.

It wasn’t all work however, as Devyn squeezed in a visit to Copenhagen’s Designmuse­um, an exhibition of French Impression­ists and a few days in Berlin. Just as inspired by paintings as sculpture, she’s keen to combine glass pieces with other media. “I’m not ‘in love’ with glass, though I love the materialit­y of it,” she says.

Fruit and art are nothing new she reflects reminding me of the still life compositio­ns of old. But it was the fashion for bright, chunky blown-glass fruit in the 1960s that inspired this collection. In contrast to those vivid, shiny pieces, Devyn deliberate­ly wanted a muted colour palette. “The colours are equally popular,” she tells me. “Sometimes people buy the full set in the same colour, sometimes they choose one type of fruit in all the colours. At different times of day they have a different look. As glass is translucen­t it glows, so it’s really intriguing.”

Though the 60s fruits are nowadays most often found languishin­g in op shops, Devyn hopes that time may be kinder to her collection. devonmadeg­lass.com

The lost-wax casting technique enables Devyn to replicate exactly the tiny details of each original piece of fruit, right down to the dimpled texture of mandarin and lemon peel.

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DEVYN ORMSBY SKILL: GLASS ARTIST Devyn Ormsby creates tactile glass fruit sculptures
WHO: DEVYN ORMSBY SKILL: GLASS ARTIST Devyn Ormsby creates tactile glass fruit sculptures

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