| Josh Simpson:
The last thing I do before I go to bed is walk
out to my studio to check the furnaces. Seeing an aurora borealis,
or watching a thunderstorm develop down the valley, or just
looking up at the sky on a perfect summer night inspires me
to translate some of the wonder of the universe into my glass.
That wonder comes out in my work, not in any purposeful way
but slowly. My work evolves in such incremental steps that
I often don't recognize the natural influences until someone
points them out to me.
Along with the natural world, my motivation comes directly
from the material itself. Glass is an alchemic blend of sand
and metallic oxides combined with extraordinary, blinding
heat. The result is a material that flows and drips like honey.
When it's hot, glass is alive. It moves gracefully and inexorably
in response to gravity and centrifugal force. It possesses
an inner light and transcendent radiant heat that makes it
simultaneously one of the most frustrating - and one of the
most rewarding - materials to work with. I attempt to coax
it; all it wants to do is drip on the floor. Most of my work
reflects a compromise between me and the glass; the finished
piece is the moment in time when we agree.
When I haven't made a particular kind of object for a
while, it takes a day or two to get back into the rhythm.
After only a few days, boredom sets in; at that point I can
lose interest and make terrible work or I can begin to push
the material and start to have fun. Exploring often leads
to something new and interesting - sometimes it just adds
more broken glass to the local landfill. I always seem to
have more ideas than I will ever have time to make
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| Mega Planet |
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| New Mexico Blue Vase |
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| Portal |
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| Red New Mexico Vase |
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| Iridescent Vases |
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| Mega Planets |
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