Bio and images
John Robinson arrived at the Creative Glass Center of America
for his winter, 2002 residence with a home-made
eight-foot-long annealing kiln. In a week or so, he decided
to make it a couple of feet longer. Even though the CGCA
studios are well equipped, Robinson knew in advance that his
blown glass trees would be too tall for any ordinary kiln.
Soon, he had exceeded his own expectations. By the end of his
residency, he was spiraling blown glass "tornadoes" which
would challenge the capacity of his rebuilt kiln. When he
left CGCA taking his long kiln with him, the studio was
enriched with an eight foot tall stepped platform designed by
Robinson to facilitate his trees and tornado experiments (The
platform was immediately put to another use by a kiln caster
in the next group of fellows).
At CGCA, Robinson, a self-taught Canadian glass blower,
concentrated on environmental sculptures relating to the
forest. The works are environmental in two senses. They are
celebrations of the primal environment in which he grew up
and they will be assembled on an environmental scale as
clusters of up to 50 trees seven or eight feet tall. He does
not regard these works as installations because they will be
self-contained, with the trees suspended in a pre-determined
pattern not related to the space where they are displayed.
Some smaller forest works will be wall-mounted, but Robinson
wants viewers to walk around and through most of them.
Although glass is too fragile to allow people to move freely
among suspended objects, he plans to offer a branching
pathway, one which forces a choice of one direction or
another. The number and density of the trees will hide the
paths' destinations.
"I tend to gravitate toward non-conventional means of
producing things," Robinson says. "I'm a firm believer in not
visualizing a piece fully before you make it. In the first
place, it's going to look too contrived and in the second
place, you can't make the piece do something that it doesn't
want to do. It's going to tell you, 'Hey, that's not the way
I want to go!"
Through trial and error, he evolved his idiosyncratic and
theoretically outrageous technique for blowing tall trees
with twisting trunks and bent, Y-shaped branches. He ascends
his platform with a textured but short trunk shape and uses
gravity and an assistant to pull the top of the tree down. In
minutes, the tube of glass has cooled to rigidity. He removes
it from the metal pipe and takes the rod of still hot glass
in his gloved hands: reheating the narrow end in order to add
and shape small branches.
The temperature difference between the trunk and the
branching top of the tree is such that about half the
completed trees explode but Robinson accepts these losses as
part of the process. Nevertheless, he admits, "There are
hours of tedium doing it over and over. I have to accept the
tedium. The advantage is that glass blowing is such a focused
process; you can't daydream and blow. When you're deeply
focused it becomes meditation. It clears your mind. Then the
best ideas come because your head is not full of all the
crap. When that happens, that's the reward."
Robinson's interest in the forest is both personal and
mythic. "What generates myth," he says, "is experience with
the environment. That's universal. People who live in deserts
have a different environment but the issues are the same:
birth, death, aging, reproduction, food. The environment is
the lens through which you see those issues."
Robinson remembers camping trips and his father telling
stories around the fire as light and shadow danced among the
trees. "That's a human experience that goes back a long time
and generates ideas about what reality is. We live in a
reconstructed environment now. For me it doesn't hold the
same capacity to create myth. At one time we belonged to the
environment. Now the environment belongs to us.
Robinson's sensitivity to astronomical time: the cycles of
the moon, the solstices and equinoxes, leads him to see our
dependence on clocks as arrogant. Before turning to the
forest theme, he made a series of non-functional clocks to
illustrate this human-centered artifice.
Through the forest, he hopes to complete several projects
addressing time in a more organic experiential way. Sunrise
or sunset is symbolized by trees of translucent golden-yellow
glass with base stained black with frit. Their color gold, is
the "incorrupt substance. . . treasures we've lost the
meaning for" as well as the color of sunlight. He planned red
and black trees to symbolize a forest on fire, a feared
disaster in the forest environment. The colors proved
incompatible, but he finally made it work. "That's the point
of being here (at CGCA)," he reveals without self-pity. "At
home, it's too expensive to spend two weeks figuring out one
piece."
He hopes to continue the series with of black trees whose
blue branches are sprinkled with white suggest the starry
night sky. And white wintry trees will represent a "valuable
experience. I love the snow and the lack of confusion in the
quiet."
In contrast to the large trees, Robinson produced a huge
number of highly realistic feathers in dark topaz glass
accented with black, layered over clear polished tips and
quills. He assembles these into spiraling constructions
relating to the mythic Raven and his profound teasing lessons
for human beings. Raven's tricks often illuminate humans'
proper and respectful relationship to nature, lessons which
are mirrored in Robinson's intuitive relationship to his
chosen natural medium: glass.
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Last modified
03:31 PM 03/04/2008