Bio and images
"I think if you become bored as a glass blower you're not
doing something right," says Lisa Cerny, one of the Spring
2001 Resident Fellows at the Creative Glass Center of
America. Cerny, a Canadian, began her professional art
studies at the Alberta College of Art and Design as a graphic
design major. Happily, she discovered glass in her foundation
year. "Graphic design was all about deadlines and product and
stress," she recalls. "Glass was very laid back-- plus it was
glass!"
Cerny, however, did not abandon graphics' two-dimensional
orientation but simply applied it directly to her new
three-dimensional medium, decorating the sides of blown
vessels with complex pictures in light and dark. In addition,
she often even seems to approach blown forms in what might be
called a graphic mode. The walls of her studio at the CGCA
were
covered with charts of vessel silhouettes and her vase-shapes
or stacked three-dimensional lidded vessels are symmetrical
and silhouette-based.
Though she produced a number of classic functional blown
glass pieces almost as a discipline, the focus of Cerny's
work at CGCA expanded on etched drawings of human and animal
subjects. "I like beautiful form," she explains. "I like to
make vessels but the fact that I can apply drawings makes
them my own."
She uses two techniques. Some drawings are etched with a
diamond drill into a dark ground through a layer of white
heat-compatible Paradise paint. The stippled surface is then
overlaid with a glossy gather of clear glass. Using what
might be described as a shallow cameo technique for other
works, Cerny layers white and black or colored glass. With
the drill, she works through the top layer. It isn't a true
cameo work because Cerny does not carve and modulate value in
low relief through a thick layer of glass. Her layered-glass
pieces are sandblasted to a matte finish after she completes
the drawing.
Cerny sometimes reheats and blows out etched painted pieces
inviting distortions. Continuing an engaging earlier series,
at CGCA she produced a group of African animal vessels
emphasizes the black and white patterning of zebras and
elephants. When reheated and blown out the exaggerated
patterns reinforce the shape of the vessel and the roundness
of the animals. Cerny devises compatible forms for feet and
lids: for elephants, a series of 'fat' rolling curves; for
zebras, a sleek neck and foot banded in white and black. She
similarly distorts human faces by reheating, but the effect
is less decorative than the animal works. The expressive
heads are not represented in illusionistic space but are more
flatly organized in the manner of Ben Shahn, an artist she
admires.When she arrived at the CGCA, she talked about
experimenting more with distortion, but she also said, "The
next step is to make conscious decisions about what I want to
say." By the end of the residency, it seemed she was moving
away from distortions, toward pieces which embrace accuracy
and control purposefully--sometimes playfully.
For example, an urn dedicated to the founders of Wheaton
Village, the glass factory where the CGCA is located, is
adorned with tongue-in cheek Victorian fussiness. Four
intricate portrait medallions float on a wide white band
edged with elaborate borders. The exaggerated conventions,
rigid organization and tour de force display of skill are a
commentary on the aesthetics of traditional glass from one
who really understands them.
A second approach in Cerny's recent work is strikingly
illusionistic. On a cobalt blue vessel, sharply isolated
highlights and muted half-tones effectively suggest the
shadows and harsh artificial lighting of jazz clubs. Cerny
allows the shadows on the inward-focused face of a trombone
player to melt into the soft blue ground (most likely a
meaningful color choice). Her foreshortening of the horn
takes advantage of the convex surface of the vessel and the
scene is not limited by a border Rather, her rendering
dissolves the surface of the blown vessel, inviting us to
look beyond its tangible form into an illusionistic pictorial
space, a satisfying duality of visual experience.
With rare exceptions, like the founder's vessel, her
compositions avoid the singular point of view of Greek vase
painting. Rather, they provide visual links between images
arranged around the body of a vessel whose curves describe
mass and movement. Turning the vessel 360* in your hands may
be the equivalent of turning in place and looking out from
the center. Or it might be interpreted like a film sequence.
Though the imagery in each work is related in subject matter,
Cerny says the series is often "pieced together in a fairly
random way" more for visual flow than as a narrative, for
example. "I'd like to be aesthetically pleasing," she
acknowledges. By allowing viewers to "read [the pictures] in
their own ways," she achieves her goal of doing "work that's
meaningful to me and to a wide spectrum of people."