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About

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I’m often asked how one starts out on the path to blowing glass; I was lucky enough to be born into a glass-making family. My grandfather worked as an industrial glassworker at General Electric in Cleveland, Ohio for forty-two years. His experience and technical knowledge helped my father, Thomas Kekic, build the first glass studio and program for the Rochester Institute of Technology in New York. I could say that glass is in my genes. 

 

Growing up during the early studio art glass movement in America, I was surrounded by hand-made objects and people who worked hard at developing their craft using raw, natural materials and great effort to bring their creative ideas to life. And after my father passed away in 1984, I had all but forgotten his glassmaking.

 

It was when I was coming of age that I fully realized my legacy while attending a beginning glassblowing class at Penland School of Crafts in North Carolina, where my father had been some twenty years before. For me, Penland came to be a place of discovering my own creative resources and passion; it was there that I developed a new relationship with glass, one where I rediscovered the value of finely crafted things that were made by hand, not only as useful and beautiful objects, but in the satisfaction one gets in making them.

Nick

Third-Generation Glassman

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Process

Molten, Malleable, Magic

Glass is a fascinating, compelling, and challenging material with which to work. As a substance used for artistic expression, its only limitations are those that that we create for ourselves. I believe there’s a way to do it in glass; one needs only to find the way.

 

Glass working techniques have evolved for thousands of years. I’ve benefited from those early traditions, borrowing many old world techniques to help me realize my own vision. But glassblowing for me has become a process of taking a super hot liquid and freezing it to room temperature in a controlled--and sometimes precarious--balancing act of heat, gravity, timing and human intervention.

 

I find glass is most beautiful when I work it in a way that captures and expresses this fluidity as a material while maximizing its unique relationship with color and light. I design my work to be decorative and often functional, using clean, strong lines in form and color. I’ve often felt most satisfied when making things that are both beautiful and useful.

Studio

Rising Out of the Ashes

My wife Tamasin and I built the Tsuga Studios hot shop in 2000 on land in Chester, Vermont that had been in Tamasin’s family for generations. We harvested and milled Tsuga Canadensis, the scientific name for the Eastern Hemlock tree, for the lumber to use in our new building. We also built a home and creative space for exploring and developing new techniques and design ideas while working to market and promote our work.

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Everything changed in 2017: on September 13th, the flue gases from the glass furnace ignited framing and timbers in the Glass Studio wall. Thankfully I discovered the fire quickly, and with the help of local volunteers, I was able to control the fire before the building was totally lost. Most importantly no one was hurt, but the studio suffered major damage and the glassworks needed to be shut down.

 

After much exploration, consideration, and reconstruction, I moved my glass operation to an old paper mill that is sited on the first major canal in America in Bellows Falls, Vermont. I found a place where I could use hydroelectric power; I invested in an electric glass furnace; moved equipment; and built a new studio in a groovy renovated industrial space.  

 

I now use renewable energy from the  Connecticut River to melt and cool my glasswork, shrinking my carbon footprint and reducing energy costs while continuing to make refined beautiful art glass from raw earth materials.

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