Bio and Images
Among the top tier of glass blowers working today, Tom
Farbanish exploits a broad range of hot glass techniques. His
recent work synthesizes a polarity of expressive forms,
contrasts which could interpreted as bridging and even
challenging habitual cultural norms distinguishing functional
vessel traditions from "high art" sculptural traditions.
In 1985, Farbanish was among the Creative Glass Center of
America's earliest resident fellows. His fall, 2002 residency
was his third at the CGCA. His familiarity with the facility
allowed him to maximize his time. "I think of this as a nine
to five, five days a week opportunity to make as many things
as I can. I came here to hunker down and make specific
things." He brought along an assistant, Ben Ostrom, to help
him complete the work to his satisfaction. Farbanish knew in
advance that the Wheaton Village hot shop has a larger glory
hole than that in his own studio. He was partly drawn to CGCA
because of the potential to work bigger.
Farbanish appears to be relaxed and even casual as he
sketches shapes in chalk on the floor, briefly consults with
Ostrom and settles in to work, pacing himself comfortably
like an experienced mountain climber. However his apparent
nonchalance is deceptive; this artist did not arrive "in the
upper echelon of being able to get a shape accomplished." by
luck. He is a severe self-critic. "I don't want to waste any
time or money," he says. "I only analyze the deficiencies. I
just want to eliminate the weakest point."
Farbanish has broad experience in making his own work,
helping other artists, such as Kiki Smith, to realize their
ideas, and in teaching. For the last couple of years he has
been involved in projects for others and has not shown his
own art.
"The idea of understanding how things work" is intrinsic. "I
am a maker of things; that's what I am," he says but he
rejects classification as "craftsman as yeoman." Such
distinctions are not just words. Like so many artists working
today, Farbanish juggles competing commitments. Becoming a
father caused him to become more concerned with economic
security. "Years ago I never questioned what I was doing. In
first grade I was the one who did the bulletin board. I
always knew I'd be in art."
Nevertheless, he knows that "Most successful artists are
phenomenal businessmen. Successful artists are driven,
focused, determined. A very successful artist is extremely
selfish," but how "selfish" can a parent permit himself to
be? At CGCA Farbanish was given the opportunity to be
"selfish," to concentrate for six full weeks on his own
gallery-oriented work.
Almost as a warm-up, he completed a number of frankly
traditional functional vessels. They were generous,
symmetrical and classical in form with curling handles.
Compact bases in one contrasting color, usually black, and
lip wraps in a third emphasized vibrant body colors like lime
green and royal blue. However, these were peripheral to
Farbanish's more ambitious production which draws upon the
vessel tradition as subject, expanding and improvising on the
vessel forms.
The bodies of the vase-like shapes are composed of stacked
geometric parts: spheres, cylinders and cones. In contrast to
the symmetry of the central sections, exuberant, fantastical
handles are fluid like drapery. They are made by
solid-working hot glass on a metal punty rod: twisting,
pulling and forming a shape which will pair with another
freely-formed handle, compatible but not identical in form.
The assembled pieces literally enlarge on the vessel idea by
becoming objects beyond function in scale. By exceeding
practical human scale--that is the size at which an object
can be easily shifted from one display point to another,
lifted by the handles or used as practical containers -- they
command a certain kind of attention. Likewise, they
expressively contradict their formal description by acting
like sculpture with fluid, spatially expansive Baroque
handles and a patterned, gestural painted surface. Handles
combined with painting can utterly contradict the symmetry of
the central form, suggesting a secondary layer of meaning
superimposed on a marginally compatible proposition.
The vaguely liturgical shapes and subsequent painted
decorations of these sculptures make myriad references to
vessel traditions from Greek to Islamic. Farbanish's parents
were Russian Orthodox and early experiences of church art,
which carries significant meaning through decorative
embellishments, may have played a part in forming his
aesthetic. "Most successful work (in crafts) is utterly
digestible or is based on beauty," he proposes. "It's not the
intent of my work to be solely beautiful but I intend the
object to be with people."
There are many sources for this observant artist, but the
link between Farbanish's work and textile art is notable. In
his own studio, using glue and metal screws, Farbanish will
assemble the components he made at CGCA. Then he becomes a
painter looking at glass as a surface to be composed with
color. His expressive painting is somewhat reminiscent of
artists of the Pattern and Decoration movement like Robert
Kushner.
In some ways, Farbanish resembles a master Baroque artist
like Bernini. He orchestrates a broad panoply of form and
materials to achieve a finished work which transcends them
all. Nevertheless, though he's been known to use metal as a
sculptural component, he identifies primarily with glass. "I
like the idea that I'm involved in a material that has an
enormous history. I think of the vessel as a painter thinks
of a 2-d format. I use the vessel as the same kind of
starting point."
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01:43 PM 03/04/2008