For Ross’s pieces the fascination with
glass’s liquid properties shaped
the concept. From the outset he decided to make impressively large
sculptural work, having previously only worked with industrially
mould
made glass.
The first fluid shapes developed were of human size but Ross decided
to
challenge the maestros to do something never attempted before,
scale
becoming a barrier beckoning to be surmounted. The amount of glass
needed is approximately 25 kgs, and it takes an hour to prepare
that
much glass for the first gather of blowing alone. A specially
constructed platform rigged on a fork lift truck is made to support
a
maestro being slowly elevated as he blows the huge pieces, involving
the attention of the entire factory below. After blowing the
cylindrical free flowing structures are flame polished and then
carefully transported to the lehr and cooled down for nearly 12
hours.
Luckily Venetian cristallo, also known as ‘long glass’,
has the right
properties for these pieces compared to Scandinavian or Czech glass!
The finished internally lit sculptures sit on lacquered MDF bases
hand
crafted in Italy and the electrics are developed by some of Italy’s
best lighting engineers. Some of the pieces have been treated with
an
internal mirror finish, also performed by master craftsmen in Venice.
A parallel project that grew on naturally from the unique exhibition
pieces is a limited edition series of table lights. These smaller
scale
internally lit sculptures rest on a highly polished stainless steel
base creating a mirror image, bestowing a notion of infinity and
alluding to the imposing nature of the unique pieces. |