ROLLIN KARG
Rollin Karg is a versatile artist
who likes to work on a larger scale when creating original designs in handblown
glass and glass sculpture.
Karg,
an imaginative glass artist from America’s Midwest, describes himself as "having
the sense of form of a sculptor, the dexterity of a gymnast, the eye of a
painter and the knowledge of a chemist."
His primary focus is designing and
creating massive sculptural pieces from molten glass, usually shaped in a
freeform, asymmetrical manner. He creates forms of various colors inside masses
of clear crystal or saturates the piece with a dense shower of blues, blacks and
dichroic colors.
In his effort to exploit the
artistic possibilities of this ancient medium in new ways, Karg uses high tech
dichroic glass to add a kinetic quality to many of his pieces. The word dichroic
is from classic Greek: di means two and chroic means color.
Dichroic
glass was developed in the 1960s for use in high technology applications. It
manipulates light in two ways, transmitting one color while reflecting another.
It appears to change colors when the viewer moves in relation to the piece.
Karg
is particularly skillful at picking up and applying pieces of dichroic glass to
a sculptural form in such a way that the metallic coatings are encased in a mass
of clear crystal, allowing for enjoyment of the optical properties of this very
rare and special glass.
Primarily, he uses glassmaking
techniques that are thousands of years old, along with many of his own
invention. He often pushes the limits of the medium in terms of what one person,
even working with an assistant, can manage on the end of a five foot long
blowpipe.
Some of his pieces run 65 pounds or more, even after sections have been cut away
during the finishing and polishing process. Karg also creates
smaller pieces such as
paperweights, eggs and small sculptures. Karg attended Wichita State University
and studied hot glass at Emporia State University, both in Kansas. He worked
successfully as an industrial engineer, photographer, potter and woodworker
before becoming a full time glass artist in 1983 and his own studio, Karg Art
Glass.
Since then his wife and six
children have joined him in what is now a family business. Interestingly, his
brother and nephew, both named James Karg, are partners in a glass studio in
rural Georgia; both learned the craft by working with Rollin.
Karg has won scores of awards in
competitions and shows throughout the United States, and has staged a number of
one-man shows in his home state of Kansas. |