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Visual Arts: Molten Mysteries

Santisteban in his Franklin, Tenn., studio
Santisteban in his Franklin, Tenn., studio

Jose Santisteban鈥攂eads of perspiration glistening on his brow鈥攔otates a long, thin metal tube tipped with a bubble of honey-colored molten glass inside a furnace that鈥檚 been heated to 2,100 degrees Fahrenheit. As African jazz plays in the background, Santisteban removes the pipe from the furnace, blows air into the glass bubble, and gently rolls it into a desired shape on a metal table. He repeats the process over and over, using various metal and wooden tools to shape the bubble into a beautiful glass vase.

鈥淚鈥檓 fascinated by so many things about glass,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a mysterious medium. I love its fluidity, how it moves and behaves. I love everything about it.鈥

Owner of the Franklin Glassblowing Studio, Santisteban, BA鈥99, came to his love of glassblowing after college, having taken only one art course鈥攁n elective in painting鈥攁s an undergraduate English major. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 want to go to graduate school in English or philosophy,鈥 he says, 鈥渟o a month after graduation, I went to Seattle and became apprenticed to a family friend who owned a glassblowing studio there.鈥

I鈥檓 fascinated by so many things about glass. It鈥檚 a mysterious medium. I love its fluidity, how it moves and behaves. I love everything about it.

鈥擩ose Santisteban, BA鈥99

It was in Seattle that Santisteban met famed glassblowers like Dale Chihuly and realized that making art from glass was his life鈥檚 calling. He went on to earn a master鈥檚 degree in fine arts from Rochester Polytechnic Institute in New York, then studied with master Venetian glassblowers Silvano Signoretto and Davide Salvadore in Murano, Italy.

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Returning to Middle Tennessee, Santisteban spent two years planning and building a modern glassblowing studio in a renovated office building in Franklin, just south of Nashville. 鈥淢odern鈥 is a misnomer, as the glassblowing process has changed very little since the Phoenicians invented it in the first century B.C. Today鈥檚 furnaces may be heated by gas or electricity instead of wood, and a stainless steel table has replaced the marble slab where the blown glass is turned and shaped. But the media and equipment鈥攕hards of clear and colored glass; metal blowpipes, tweezers and cutters; wooden shaping blocks; even wet paper鈥攁re very similar to the ancient tools of the trade.

Santisteban3-666Prices for Santisteban鈥檚 work range from $65 for a paperweight to $400 for a small vase and several thousand dollars for a chandelier. He also offers instruction in glassblowing for beginners and advanced students.

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