Although glass blowing was one of colonial
America's first industries and enjoyed great popularity
during the Art Nouveau period of the late 1800's, hand blown
art glass had all but disappeared from the American art
and craft scene until the 1970's. Stuart Abelman was one
of a small group of artists across the country who saw the
magic and challenge in glass and set about taking the medium
further than ever before.
Stuart
Abelman first saw the glass department in his fourth year
of a Bachelor of Fine Arts program at Carnegie Mellon University
in Pennsylvania. It was, indeed, love at first sight. He
devoted his entire senior year to glass blowing. He then
entered the graduate four year Master of Fine Arts program
at UCLA, and proceeded to study and blow glass for four
more intensive years, receiving his degree in 1976.
After
a stint at teaching glass blowing and developing a stained
glass program at the College level in California, Stuart
realized that teaching did not allow him the time to create
in glass all of the ideas he found himself constantly sketching.
It was time to start his own studio, and in 1977 Abelman
Art Glass was born. The first year was spent building that
studio: furnaces, pot furnaces, glory holes, lehrs (annealing
ovens), glassblowing benches, etc. In late 1977, the first
furnace was lit at Abelman Art Glass Studio in Southern
California.
Stuart's
glass pieces are shown in galleries and museums around the
world and have become permanent additions to museum, private
and celebrity collections here and overseas. Recently, he
designed an angel ornament for the White House Christmas
tree. He has done glass commissions for the movie industry,
and has pieces documented in the Library of Congress.
Each
Abelman Art Glass piece is signed, numbered, and dated at
the Abelman Art Glass Studio, and is an heirloom to hand
down from generation to generation.
Stuart
uses his own formulas to ensure the purest glass possible.
Each piece is made entirely of hot molten glass and is worked
and completed at the furnace. All of the colors and design
patterns are formed from hot glass. No paint is used. Many
of the beautiful colors are actually made with precious
metals, gold and silver. And each piece is absolutely gorgeous.
We
at Art for Wildlife Galleries in Coronado are proud to represent
the work of Mr. Abelman.