The language of glass
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Young Chang
There was something about sand melting into clear goo and the goo
being shaped like it was caramel and the caramel getting blown,
literally, into beauty that intrigued Kent Kahlen more than 10 years
ago.
Until then, he was a self-proclaimed “typical youngster” who
started and quit jobs in a pattern that showed he was still looking
for his place in the world. Kahlen fell into glassblowing during a
stint with chiropractics in 1988 (his back hurt, he went to see a
chiropractor, he decided to be a chiropractor). He was walking
through the art department at Santa Ana Junior College one day when
he saw someone working on this “glowing red thing.”
“That was it. I was hooked,” said the Newport Beach resident who
is exhibiting his work at the Festival of the Arts in Laguna Beach.
“I was totally naive to this glass, art world.”
That glowing red thing, technically called the glory hole (the
place where glass can be heated to be shaped into art), became
Kahlen’s niche.
Today his studio contains two such fiery holes -- the glory hole
and the furnace -- puntis (rods used to transfer melted glass),
blowpipes, pipe-warmers and other chunky tools. It’s hot in there.
Sort of scary too, as the presence of things that can burn you is
plenty. But for the 36-year-old Kahlen, who barely flinches at small
burns from ash falling on his skin, a glowing rod with a bulb of
fluorescent orange glass at its tip might as well be a baton meant to
twirl.
“Explosions are infrequent,” he said. “I’ve had this glory hole
explode on me, but it was nothing.”
His furnace is kept on every day, regardless of whether he is
working and even if he is sleeping. It maintains a temperature of
2,000 degrees Fahrenheit and is able to house up to 320 pounds of
molten glass, which is born of a mixture of silica, ash and lime. The
glory hole is turned on only when he is working and maintains a heat
level of 2,300 degrees Fahrenheit.
Kahlen starts by sticking a blowpipe into the furnace. Once the
tip of the rod is clumped with this mix, he rolls the substance on a
marvel (a type of table) to smooth it and works with his many
tweezers, sheers and jacks to shape the shapeless mass. The texture
of the glass is like thick gel at this point, yielding to every whim
of the tools held in Kahlen’s hand.
The artist then blows into the blowpipe and makes a little bubble
in what is, at this point, pretty round. The bubble expands and makes
the glass hollow. Sometimes, if he’s working on a big piece and needs
help, his assistant Josh Backhaus will blow into the pipe while
Kahlen observes the changing shape.
Backhaus said he got into glassblowing for the same reason his
employer did.
“You see it, there’s that attraction,” he said. “The fire and all
the noise and you see somebody pull the glass out and it’s like
nothing else.”
Some of what gets made in Kahlen’s studio include vases, floor
lamps, tables, custom-lighting features, sculptures and even
paperweights.
The average glass buyer doesn’t always know that glass comes from
sand, from such a creative process, Kahlen said. But the artist, who
actually considers himself both an artist and a craftsman, depending
on whether his creation is used functionally or sculpturally, said
more people are becoming glass collectors and thus aware of
glassblowing.
They’re also hesitant to dismiss the art as just a craft.
“We’re growing out of that pretty rapidly,” Kahlen said.
Glassblowing has continued to hold his interest for 12 years
because the creative possibilities are endless.
“There’s always a new design, a new shape you can do,” he said.
“It’s got all the good ingredients to keep you interested for a
lifetime.”
As far as Kahlen is concerned, time spent in his studio is time
spent speaking the language of glass.
“You’re telling the glass what to do and making statements with
the glass,” he said. “It’s a very intriguing medium. You really can’t
beat it as far as what it gives you in the end. “
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