Caribbean bottle, left side piece, see description below.
Caribbean bottle, left side piece, see description below.
checkbox
For sale
Yes
layers
Remaining
1
attach_money
Price
$140
local_shipping
Shipping
Added Fee
Description
Blown glass, using a variety of fused glass colors all applied before the shape is blown.
The measurements below are applied towards shipping.
The price is for the one bottle on the left side of picture, not for both pieces.
Item details
GTIN: 80115
Price
$140.00
Quantity available
1
Dimensions
Package
Length/Depth: 14 in
Width: 14 in
Height: 14 in
Shipping
Refund & return policy
No refund or returns allowed on this purchase.
Exceptions may apply. Please message David for more information.
My first exposure to glass forming was at California State University, Fullerton. It was 1983 and I was working on my Bachelors degree in art with a focus on ceramics and decided to take the class
I experimented with many different techniques and made attempts at combining them, for instance, combining fusing with blowing and casting with blowing. I spent most of my time blowing glass pieces and then discovered glass casting, which became the dominant method used for my Masters degree exhibition in the fall of 1990.
Around that time I began applying to fairs and festivals locally around Southern California. Then I was invited to participate at a Renaissance festival in Minneapolis, Minnesota. There I had a large space to exhibit my work and demonstrate to the public for seven weekends during August and September. This was quite an undertaking to build equipment and create a professional exhibit and demonstrate all while being fifteen hundred miles away from home. The fair would draw somewhere between twenty to forty thousand people on the weekend days it was open and my demonstrations would have well over 200 people watching and I would be engaging them verbally with wireless microphone explaining processes and each step of the glass piece I was making.
In 2004, I had the opportunity to return to CSU, Fullerton to teach glass forming for several years as an adjunct teacher. It was fascinating how the students were hungry for information and just about anything I said got their attention. I enjoyed the opportunity and was happy that quite a few of those students continued working with glass after graduating.
I retired from the Renaissance fair in 2009 and since have focused on participating in fairs and festivals. I travel to the mid-west still but now it’s for art fairs in Texas, Oklahoma and Missouri, just to name a few and then show locally around southern California where I live and have my studio.