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Friday, 12 April 2019

Homo Explorer. Flammarion engraving in glass. 2019. 32 x 26 cm


Homo Explorer is what I called this piece. I very much like this name. I like the subject matter behind the piece; the pilgrim having reached the end of the world and having found a gap between the firmament and the earth. I was thinking about the pilgrim. To reach the end of the world, he crossed the whole earth. The pilgrim saw very much on his journey and he has a rich life experience. What is he looking for? He is searching for the Different and the Unknown. What is this, the search for God? Yes, to a certain extent. I think it is not for nothing that the pilgrim is depicted kneeling, and that in the upper left corner you can see Ezekiel’s double wheel (a wheel in a wheel) as Divine symbolism. But at the same time, it is the search for the Unseen.

What you see here is called Flammarion engraving. Camille Flammarion was the author of many scientific books. He was involved with spiritualism and was acquainted with Elena Blavatsky. Within the book titled “Atmosphere: Popular Meteorology” written by Flammarion and published in 1888, you can find this picture with the following subtext, “A missionary of the Middle Ages tells that he had found the point where the sky and the Earth touch...”. Who is the author of this engraving? Who is the author behind this idea? No one knows but it is believed that Flammarion could have made it himself. The original looks like this.

My work with the glass was divided into two parts: Part 1) I wanted to recreate this engraving within glass using my own technique. Part 2) To create my own color scheme and to apply it with the help of glass powder. The “engraving” part of this work was fairly complicated. Probably one of the most challenging drawings I have done thus far. And so I completed it by primarily working with a needle and using it to organize the particles of glass powder. For those of you who are interested in the fusing with glass powder technique, you can find more information about it here. The “engraving” part of this piece took 39 hours to complete. This is how it looks before the coloring process.
I deliberately did not include a frame around my piece. In my opinion, without a frame there is more space for the imagination.

And so, I turned over the piece and started to color it in on the reverse side with glass powder. This took another 21 hours to complete. The total time spent on this work is 60 hours.

For the first time ever, I have put together and released a video of a slide show on YouTube to illustrate the process from beginning to end.

What is new in my work? I have for the first time used a new color called “Blue Black” (104 Bullseye Glass). It gives off a blue tint before fusing and becomes Black with a shade of blue after being fused. And of course, I was doing an experiment. What would happen if I color the whole backside of this piece with glass powder? Is it possible that the work would not have turned out well? Yes, there was the risk of multiple bubbles appearing on piece which would in turn ruin the piece completely.

If you google “Flammarion Engraving”, you will find many different color schemes. I found fifteen different color schemes as well a mosaic on the subject, a stained glass piece and a woodcut. On top of all that, I also found that someone is trying to sell a version of the Flammarion Engraving that you would color in yourself as well as one that is already colored in. If you want to color in your own pilgrim, you can find it here.

As you can see in the picture, there are two completely different parts: The Universe and Our World. It is interesting coloring in this picture, especially the Universe part of it. Here you can see three different color schemes side-by-side.
I was showing these three to my friends during the making of this piece. I was interested in what people had to say when I would show it to them. The feedback was always different. And so I thought for a long time about how I see the Universe. For me, the keyword to the Universe is “Different”. I am certain the the pilgrim saw colors that he never saw before on in Our World. How to create Different colors? I chose Emerald Green, Turquoise, Lilac and Pink. I decided that the combination of these colors would differentiate from what can be found on Our World, namely the blue sky with the yellow sun and the green earth. Of course, I used many different shades. In total I used thirty different colors.

I have to say that, that this is not the first piece I did about the Universe. The thought of the Unknown has enveloped me for many years. What do you see in the picture if you single out the Universe part? It consists of a wheel within a wheel, different suns and all the while it has a multi-layered structure and rhythm. I would say that the Universe is shown as an intricate ornament. Right? Right! Does it look like music? Yes, it does! I am guiding you towards the idea of music. I believe that the pilgrim does not just see, but hears as well. He becomes a man who is listening to the music of the Universe.

I tried to convey this idea. Respectively, I wanted to draw the music of the Universe. Do you see the clouds? I colored them emerald green and this helps create the rhythm. Why emerald green? It came out of nowhere. I am absolutely serious. I initially colored the double wheel, then the sun and then I decided to color in just the clouds. And so a rhythm was born.

 Here is a photo illustrating the Homo Explorer (work in progress). I am holding a paintbrush.
The fully colored piece looks like this.

Finally, the work has been fused. The result of the fusing surprised me, but the glass piece turned out beautifully. Very Beautiful. The glass is extraordinarily smooth and almost warm to the touch. The surface of the piece has a subtle wave-like texture to it. The colors that I used turned out to be quite vivid, and the Universe looks gentle. I am very happy. This piece is spectacular. The weight of this piece is 1.5Kg, it is wholly tangible.

 The fusing of experimental glass it is always a process of interacting with the unknown. For example, I expected to see black lines when instead they turned out blue. I thought that the whole “engraving” part of this piece would have a relief to it, but instead the glass became smooth. I thought the colors would be more vibrant, but believe me, they turned out exactly how they are supposed to be. Yes. The final result is very different from what was initially planned. On the other hand, the piece did not become any worse for it. It can be said that the unknown has corrected my work, for which I am grateful for. Before you, is an example of the interaction between an artist and creative power.

Here are four different corners of the piece to illustrate the detail involved. I like the lake/river with the multiple townships, the shading of the water and the little bridge. The fact that my hand when working with the needle could accomplish such detail makes me pretty happy.

 In this photo, pay attention to the openings in the firmament, they are painted in the corresponding colors of the Universe.

 There should have been three shades of pink. I like the interaction between lilac and pink.

The space between the sun and the dark part of the night sky was supposed to be bluish with prominent white stars.
For some of you, it might be interesting to see what the backside of the “World” looks like. As you can see, there are quite a few bubbles. I could have used white glass as a base for this piece, but I wanted to especially see what happens to the glass powder when it is fused between two pieces of glass. This experiment turned into the backside of the “World”. The piece is reversible you can say. I was afraid, that some kind of bubble would break through the “engraving” part of this piece, but in the end, everything worked out.

 I cannot restrain myself, I am showing you with great pride and joy both my Irises (you can find the story here) and my Homo Explorer sided-by-side.
If you have any thoughts and opinions, you can write to me
juliartglass@gmail.com

Sunday, 3 February 2019

Starry Night. January 2019. 37 x 30 cm.

So, a month after the completion of Irises (you can find the story here), I have created and am gladly presenting to you my new work. Starry Night. January 2019. 37 x 30 cm.

 The original Starry Night was painted in June 1889 and is in MOMA, New York. Moreover, it is known from Van Gogh’s letters that he was not happy with Starry Night.

 You know, Van Gogh liked to copy and compared it with music and would find consolation in copying other works of art (letter to Theo of September 20, 1889).

 I thought of what Van Gogh would say when he looked at my copy of his work. When such an idea comes to mind, you are trying hard to show off. I was doing my best and I always do my best while working with glass.

 First, glass is a completely different material. Glass frit and glass powder. You have your palette of colours, but it can not be mixed together. Moreover, I confidently began to make a Starry Night out of material I never worked with - from medium sized frit. At first I thought it would not work. Then with a new technique I completed my version of Starry Night in 25 hours.

 Secondly, it is absolutely clear to me how to create this work by painting with glass powder (the description of the technique can be found here). Furthermore, I drew the village in Starry Night with glass powder. If I were to use medium-grained frit, I could not achieve such accuracy. The houses, fields and frontal trees were created with powder while the sky, stars, mountains and gardens of trees was made with medium sized frit.

 I made comparison pictures to compare the two Starry Nights side by side.



 Thirdly, I will be happy to show you my rhythm and my steps as I was creating the work. Here in this order was the progression of my starry night.






After final fusing.

 What did Van Gogh think when he painted this picture? There are thousands of interpretations. What did I think when I worked on this picture? About Van Gogh. I read his letters, read the two-volume book of the 2010 Taschen Complete Collection of Paintings. My son presented me this book for the New Year in 2012. I also thought about how my vision of Van Gogh is completely different now ... In 2012, I did not know how to approach when creating such a piece with glass. And now I pretty quickly managed to make Starry Night using techniques invented by me.

 Here is the article about the Starry Night and 10 facts that you did not know about the Starry Night by Van Gogh. There is something to think about. Van Gogh considered this work a failure. And he wrote the view from the east window 21 times, but he never wrote a grille on the windows.

 I want to quote from Van Gogh. He writes to Brother Theo on July 10, 1888
"But the sight of the stars always makes me dream in as simple a way as the black spots on the map, representing towns and villages, make me dream.
Why, I say to myself, should the spots of light in the firmament be less accessible to us than the black spots on the map of France.
Just as we take the train to go to Tarascon or Rouen, we take death to go to a star.20 What’s certainly true in this argument is that while alive, we cannot go to a star, any more than once dead we’d be able to take the train. So it seems to me not impossible that cholera, the stone, consumption, cancer are celestial means of locomotion, just as steamboats, omnibuses and the railway are terrestrial ones.
To die peacefully of old age would be to go there on foot."

Sunday, 30 December 2018

15 Years of Creativity in Glass; Retrospective of Works

Hello. Thanks for finding the time to take a look at my blog. I would like to offer you to visit my personal virtual exhibition dedicated to 15 years of my creativity in glass. I would like to introduce you to my art. I put together the best of my work to reflect the growth of my artistic mindset. You will see the source of my inspiration and the finished products. I hope you find it interesting and beautiful. 

15 years, I have worked with glass. 15 years of life, passion, rejection and tenderness. First I would like to present to you a piece that I finished in December 2018. Here you can see a fused panel of glass that is 6mm thick with a textured surface. The drawing is made with glass powder. This piece is titled Irises, inspired by Van Gogh. 29 x 35 cm. In the present, I think this is my best work with fusing. I developed the technique for drawing with glass powder and the story of it is here. 

Van Gogh was chosen as a source of inspiration due to the fact that he was bipolar. I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in December 2014. Since then, I have been depressed for a four years. To my astonishment, I have come out of depression thanks to my Irises. I worked on drawing Irises for half a year when Van Gogh painted his in two days. The story of how my Irises came about is here. 

I spent 70 hours in total creating the Irises during the 6 months that I have worked on them. Not much in half a year, but that is just my tempo at the moment. Now my momentum will increase since I am in love with glass again. During these 6 months I have come from depression to be inspired all the time and to be constantly thinking about glass... I never expected this. This is the might of beauty and art therapy. 

“I put my heart and soul into my work” that I am now presenting to you (Van Gogh). 
 I will be presenting my work from the very beginning of my artistic career to present day. What made each work challenging? What did I learn through every piece? What was the source behind my inspiration? 

I am a self-taught artist having finished a two-day stained glass workshop in Calgary, Alberta, Canada way back in 2003. Since then my life has changed drastically with regards to the countries and cities I have lived in. I understand that there are people out there that have experienced a greater change, but this is a lot from my perspective in terms of creating, moving, recreating and moving my glass shop again. In the last 15 years, I have had eight different glass shops. And throughout all this I have been stubbornly working on my glass, living with my glass, dreaming of my glass and fanaticized over my glass. It is an obsession. At one point in time I thought that I was completely done with it, but now I am back! 

Back in 2003, after the two-day workshop, I instantly wanted to create a large stained glass piece to put into the library we had in our home. This piece had more than 200 pieces. An overwhelming task for a complete amateur. I altered the design of an elephant by adding a blanket and a hat to the original design and I was very proud of myself. 
In 2004, the Divine Beauty came about. Before its creation, I was looking at photos of hundreds of other stained glass works and saw one captured me with its lines and composition but not its colour scheme. 
Thus, I decided to change the colour and make some changes to the overall composition. After I finished this piece, I could not take my eyes away from it for hours on end. I could not believe that I was capable of creating something like this. What is interesting is that when our home caught fire in 2006, I later came back into our burnt house to find a melted wall, the window in the kitchen shattered, frost and snow behind the shattered window and my Divine Beauty hanging there without a scratch on it. 
 In 2004, I heard music in the glass. One year after my work with glass I gained some insight. This feeling kept coming back to me throughout the years and I would constantly think about the music within the glass. This year, I created three stained glass pieces; though I had taken apart one of them and remake it since I was unhappy with my choice of colour. My source of inspiration for these three pieces was a drawing by my sister Galina Og. These three pieces together are called Musical Improvisations.
You will undoubtedly see a clock that gives off a rhythm. But I associate the colour of the glass to the waltz from the ballet of the Nutcracker by Tchaikovsky. This piece is called Winter Dream. 
 This piece is titled Jazz and sounds like Summertime by Ella Fitzgerald. 
 And finally Tango, a beautiful glass piece filled with passion. 
 In 2005, I made Scarlet Sails. I found a beautiful piece of glass in which I saw the sea, the sky and the sun.
 Everything that is necessary for a background. And I like sailing ships very much. Aside from this, I had wonderful glass to use for the scarlet sails. Respectively, I created my own design and so came about the Scarlet Sails which I put in our living room. At the same time, I was making many stained glass gifts for my many friends in Calgary.
 Towards the end of 2005, I decided that I would create my own rose window of my own design. I was studying symbolism and started to draw my own custom designs. At the same time, my calm life was falling apart around me. My home had already burnt down in January 2006, I had problems with my health and I was in the middle of a divorce... But I still continued to work on my glass. The Harmony of the World is a piece that was being designed and cut between 2006 and 2007 upon the remnants of my previous life in Calgary, but was only soldered and put together in Montreal where I moved in 2008 after living in New York for one year. The Harmony of the World was designed to be mounted as a “fireplace” and I spent many evenings in front of this piece. More information about The Harmony of the World can be read about here. What is Harmony for me? Whilst working on this piece, I knew that I wanted to become a glass artist and I am following this path since then. 
 Now we are in 2008. This year was a turning point for me because at the end of the year I finally decided that I have done enough research into fusing glass that I was ready to create my very own fused glass piece. I walked into a glass store and stumbled onto some glass. Naturally, I saw this glass and I understood in that moment that I wanted to create a piece with eastern ornamentalism. I searched on Google and came across an artist called Hassan Musa that makes stunning calligraphy. 
 I fell in love with Musa’s tiger and in turn I made my own and called him Beast. I rented out a glass shop and in a couple days I cut myself the pieces that would make up the Beast. Apart from that, I was very interested in the idea of how I could draw with glass frit (glass fragments of different sizes). Respectively, I took up a hammer and started making my own custom glass frit. Beast was officially my very first fusing piece and I love him very much. On either side of the piece you can see bamboo trees made from glass frit. 
Later in 2009, I made Frozen Flower where I used the same colour scheme as in the portrait painting of Anna Akhmatova by Nathan Altman (1914). 


I love this work. Later this piece became the central part of another work called Flow (2012). Jumping ahead, I will say that Flow came into my head and was cut all in one night after some awful stress. This is how I relieved my stress. 
 Starting in 2009 and until the end of 2012, I started to develop my very own custom fusing technique where I could draw the finest lines with glass powder. I was never really attracted to vases or any other conventional fused glass pieces. I wanted to draw paintings, manuscripts, icons and tapestries in glass. To draw with glass. During this time, my mind was constantly thinking about fusing. I tried different approaches, different temperature profiles but I only started to display my work in November 2012. 

 Still in 2009, I was thinking about drawing and creating my own mandala and so that it retained the idea of rotating. It is a complicated process trying to create a such a stained glass piece, but I enjoyed the process immensely. As you can see, the border changes colour continuously and this happens four times. This should show movement and in turn spin the piece. Sunrise Flower, 2009-2010. 
 2010. Leo. This is my first mosaic glass on glass. The basis of the mosaic is a sheet of glass that is meant to give the piece the effect of being translucent glass, as in a stained glass window, but the techniques used are that of a mosaic. For the first time I worked with a saw. The details and story about Leo can be found here. Here I will tell you that I tried to create an almost portrait like representation of a specific person, my post-graduate teacher. He was very dear to me and means a lot to me. So this mosaic was an important piece and required the full extent of my ability working with glass. I placed Leo (lion) in a very complex environment and by the way, bipolar. 
 And so Leo possesses an unbelievable fortitude and charisma for him to pass through this enclosed space. There are even portals opening up from his footsteps. There is hope. 
 2010. While thinking about mandalas, circles and the questions surrounding movement, I decided to create a sphere as a window in the wall. But first I needed to work on the sphere which started to show its three-dimensional aspect almost instantly. I found myself this sphere on Google and tried my hand at drawing some symmetry on it. It worked. 
If you take a look at the colouring of the sphere, you will find many different symmetries and different circular movement. Let me remind you, this is a flat stained glass piece. 
 This sphere has been placed in two different environments. At first, it was placed as a window in the wall in 2010. The idea is that the sphere is meant to represent a window while the surrounding space is meant to be a wall. 
But I was not as charmed as I thought I would be from this finished piece and in the end I took it apart and the sphere was free once again. Afterwards, I ended up moving again and once more I remade my glass shop. And the sphere in the year of 2011 found a place for itself in the sky, around it started spinning cubes that would fall to the ground, and would create an amazing ornament of human lives. You can find out more about this piece here. This piece is titled Ornamental Fantasy. I think this is the best stained glass piece I have made so far. 
 In 2011, I made another three-dimensional stained glass piece based on Sphere by Maurice Escher. 


And this is another attempt at making the same piece but in the year 2017. 
 Having made Ornamental Fantasy, I decided that I needed to create a couple more mosaics. 2012. And I worked on these two oncoming pieces practically at the same time. But my first baby was the Rhinoceros and then came Atlantis. The Rhinoceros is called Ways of Imagination and there is a story of it here. On this note, I will say that Rhinoceros was inspired by Albrecht Durer’s Rhinoceros (1515) who actually never laid his eyes upon the real creature. Durer drew what he could not see and made a lithograph out of it. 
I wanted to create a mosaic out of his lithograph and to figure out the colour scheme. I have been suspecting for a while that the universe has been providing me with the necessary glass to create my glass art. So, the glass used in the horn of the rhino was meant to be used as the horn of my rhino. Thus, the Rhinoceros turned out to be as if he was alive. This is once again a mosaic with glass on glass and can be illuminated from behind. Some of the glass used for the Rhinoceros is obsolete and is no longer being fabricated. This in turn means that the Rhinoceros is an anthem to glass and no doubt my best mosaic. 


 The next mosaic created in 2012 was called Atlantis or Broken Infinity, a tribute to my interest for esotericism and thinking about how fragile our civilization tends to be. You can read more about this mosaic here. Let me tell you that I designed every single piece to convey the “secret writings” of the gods. For multiple years I collected blue glass for this mosaic. Once again, this mosaic is glass on glass. 


 2012 was a very productive year in terms of my glass production. I was very close in my search for techniques on how I could create coloured paintings with glass powder. Yes, for 4 years I could not reach the point where I could get my glass powder to do what I wanted it to do. The glass powder is stubborn and each colour had its own characteristics that I needed to adhere to. You can find more information about the nuances of this glass powder technique here. And finally in November 2012, I created my Bestiary or Medieval Zoo. You can find more info about the Bestiary here. I will show only one piece. They look exactly how I imagined them to be. They are very pleasant to touch, they are smooth and have a little bit of a relief. I was happy!!! This is the result of several years of searching. This meant that I could finally start recreating my favourite works from medieval manuscripts. The Bestiary is an endless series, although I returned back to it only once more. 
A new era started in my art. In it I am trying to create beautiful, decorative and artistic glass. I have never seen this type of work done with glass before. 

 In December 2012, I made another important piece, God the Geometer from a 13th century manuscript. 
I was nervous about creating a drawing of the Creator. You can find more information about God the Geometer here. 

 The task in these works is to recreate them so that they look as close as possible to the original all the while trying to show off the beauty of the glass. I am a kinesthetic. It is very important for me to touch. With my fused glass, it is so easy; you can lick it if you want to, it is ecologically friendly. 

 I am interested in the question what does an artist feel when they create an artwork? I want with every brush stroke to find the state of mind that is not only meditative but to also try to hear the artists and creators who draw the pictures in the manuscripts, who draw the icons, the paintings and made the designs in the tapestries. My glass powder technique is very fine and requires perseverance and many long hours of work. In these hours, there is hardly anything that I do not think about. This leads me to appreciate my work even more. I feel like a musician who is performing the play of a composer. 

 Let us return the the story of my works. The year is 2013. Many works and experiments were done with fusing this year. From fusing, I note the work of the Prophet Elijah based off an icon from the 17th century. 


 A series of medieval grotesques. 
 Tapestry of the Lady with Unicorn. The original tapestry was made in 16th century and was 5 x 4 m. I tried to represent all the flowers, berries and apples on my own glass tapestry which was 50 x 40 cm. 

 The Prophet Elijah and Lady with Unicorn required many hours of work. Someone made for me a special angled lightbox and I organized for myself my own scriptorium. 



 You can find more information about my works done in 2013 here. The Grotesques can be found here. The Lady with Unicorn can be found here. 

 There is another work done in 2013 called the Alphabet of the Universe. It is quite important. Firstly, I experimented with it during its production. Secondly, it was the first piece that was purchased from me. Thirdly, I tried to find the bottom boundary in terms of how thin could I work with my glass powder. To this day, this is the finest work I have done. I have not managed to create thinner lines or digits since then. I was working with the thinnest needle that my hand could hold. 


 I just want to say that the photos do not convey how charming the work is. You can see the details, colour but hardly see the light relief that exists in nearly all of my fused glass pieces.

In 2013, I made a stained glass panel called Music. I took all the translucent glass I have collected over the years and cut them up. I would cut them and set them out how the music directed me to. I was curious myself as to what would happen. The story of the creation of Music can be found in the Russian version of my blog here. 
In 2014, I created the largest glass piece to this day of my artistic career, The Dance of Universe (185 x 125 cm). This piece is an impromptu and I had to create it fast. There exists a concept here, and I am not afraid to use this word. Not counting the fact that you see the starry night sky, the piece is about me, my son and my youth. Within this piece, there is an exact copy of the tectonic map of the world with glass frit. The story of this piece is being written along with this post... 4 years after its creation. The story of The Dance of the Universe can be found in Russian here. In the story there is many photos of its production as well as its presentation. I presented this piece along with many other of my works in the international art festival “Maple Leaves” and my first personal exhibition in Vandart gallery in September 2014. 
 I gave a performance. The art is for you, touch it. 







 I need to say a couple words about my son with regards to my work. He bravely accompanied me through my adventures. He heard out all my ideas. He listened carefully and asked questions. He hammered the glass to create frit at the dawn of my experiments. He knows of all my explorations to find new techniques in glass. He knows that I am in a constant search and can sometimes only talk about and discuss my own art. And still he listens, delves into and continues to ask questions. He gives advice when he can. He helped write this post in English. And he is also learning to become a creative programmer. I am a very proud mother. 

 And of course I continue my work with glass powder in the year of 2014. I will mention that this is the start of the series with medieval cities and towns from the Nuremberg Chronicles (1493). Within this series, I created a Rose, Yellow and Orange town. The Orange town is a repetition of the same theme; it was made in 2017. What is interesting is that the hand works a lot easier with repetition; it already knows where to start, how to work fast and all the secrets of the technique. You can find the story of these towns here. 



 I created a series of decorative plates and they turned out not bad. Here I present to you, Eyes. I made Eyes already twice and the facial expressions was different both times, it is quite interesting. 



 There exists also a sailing ship. Here I tried to convey air and sea and the lightness of a flying ship. I had a beautiful piece of glass. Unfortunately, the original picture was not saved. This ship is the HMS Victory flagship of Admiral Nelson. 
 Several works were also made at the end of 2014. Of these works, I would like to mention the Samurai Girl and Sunflower. Watch how, the samurai girl dances on the falling sunflower leaves. I was simultaneously inspired by two works of art, Sunflowers by Van Gogh and the drawing of a Samurai by my sister that is meant to be me which I hold very dear to me. The drawing of me by my sister Galina Og, represents me in the image of a samurai girl, it is titled My Sister Warrior. I am about to tell the story of Samurai Girl and show my ideas this way through glass. This is a future series of work.


 Another work about music towards the end of 2014. Glenn Gould (famous Canadian musician and pianist). Here he sits on his infamous chair and is playing Beethoven’s sonatas that were playing during the creation of this piece. I call it The Musician. Here I used a different technique. You can find the story in Russian about this technique here.


Another work also at the end of 2014. The Burning of the Library of Alexandria. This work was created in a period of incredible stress. The candle and flame are volumetric thus granting them a relief. 
 At the end of 2014 I was hospitalized and diagnosed with bipolar disorder. Right after the hospital, in March of 2015, I created two mosaics but I will only show one. It is called The Red Dot. I recreated a photo of myself where I am 25, sitting and smoking a tough Russian cigarette (Belomorkanal) in front of the Arctic Ocean during my time as a geologist in my beloved Arctic. The thoughtfulness in this picture is very me. In general this is how I see myself. I think I managed to successfully convey this thoughtfulness. 

 Afterwards were years of depression. The making of glass was lethargic and I had no enthusiasm at all. At one point in time I thought that I would give up glass permanently. 

 In early 2018, I created a fused piece called Japanese Garden. 
 And so, here are my Irises in the year 2018. A difficult work. I have dreamed for ten years about creating these Irises with glass. I tried to capture the rhythm of Van Gogh. How did he paint it? There are two rhythms within Irises by Van Gogh; the rhythm of the leaves and the irises themselves. It seems to me I managed to create a living piece. I am very happy that I have my Van Gogh. 

 I say in conclusion. 

 What do I want to tell you after these 15 years? Was it worth not sleeping the nights and to constantly think about glass? You will not believe it, but it was worth it. This is an incredibly exciting process of creativity and the gaining of mastery. I am not going to talk about inspiration, because if you feel it once, you will never mistake it for anything ever again. I would like to note that I feel a moral satisfaction from the work that I have done. I dedicated myself fully to my art, achieved my own goals; it was very exciting. 

 I do not know why glass has had such an impact on my life. I never thought that I would walk the path of an artist, but for the past ten years it has been my main activity. Every time I work with glass, my hand is lighter, my music is finer and my work is better. 

 With pleasure I have shown you my art work. Too bad not in person. Thanks for your time and attention. 

 If you have any thoughts and opinions, you can write to me.
juliartglass@gmail.com