GLASS from page 79 k •" 0 • Wf''. • bowls, perfume bottles and figurines. Comfortable with sandblasting processes for her architectural installa- tions, she has returned to glass blow- ing techniques after a 15-year hiatus. "I've been working on this exhibit since February," says Kelman, 51, who became a certified diver in Mexico and has touched down in the Caribbean. "The images are reminis- cent of a coral reef. I've always loved the colors and shapes of things that I can't see in my normal life. "The dishes remind me of sea anemone, usually flesh or reddish colors with tentacles that wave around and sting. The perfume bot- tles are in the shapes of snails with twisty stoppers that look like little . tongues. I also will have a few fish and little pieces of glass in the shape of worms. "I'm going to have a window tableau with sheer fabric and hang pieces there. I'll have a box filled with sand and crushed glass holding little pieces that are reminiscent of water creatures — spiral designs like shells and two-part structures like clams." Kelman's interest in glass dates back to her college days, when she was a chemistry major at the University of Michigan. Although her mother, Gwen Kelman, had been an art teacher, the professional commitment did not get passed down initially. "I loved chemistry when I started, but I wasn't enthralled for the last couple of years," Kelman explains. "There was a glass maker who made the lab ware in the building, and I became fascinated with what he was doing. I eventually bought a book and a torch, took classes at the Birmingham Bloomfield Art Association and rented my own stu- dio. I made figurines, giraffes and kangaroos, and sold. them all over the country." In 1975, Kelman opened a studio with another glass artist, Sylvia Vigiletti, who serves on this year's Michigan Glass Month Committee with Jean Sosin and Herbert Babcock. Soon, Kelman introduced the work made there at a wholesale show spon- sored by the American Craft Council in San Francisco, took a year's worth of orders from galleries and repeated the process a few times. Although building her business, Kelman still wanted access to a career that would be more practical and earned a master's degree in dietetics from Wayne State University in the late '70s. She enjoyed the experience but is glad she could earn her living through glass projects and never had to take a professional detour. Kelman spent most of her time with sandblasting work after she stopped sharing studio space with Vigiletti in 1983. Among her current More Glass Acts Michigan Glass Month features the work of many Jewish artists. Meet some of them. usan Glass returned to her maiden Qiname for professional reasons. What could be more perfect for a glass artist? During Michigan Glass Month in April, Susan Glass will be showing her work at Ariana Gallery in Royal Oak and is only one of many artists with Jewish heritage repre- sented in galleries across the metro area. "I'll be showing large platters, bowls and vases that are multicolored," says Glass, who designs works that are deliberately asymmet- rical. "I like to have clear side wraps and fluted pieces." This artist found her focus unexpectedly. She took a class with a friend in Seattle and was captivated with the material. "I love the texture, look and transparency of glass," she says. 3/31 2000 84 David Goldhagen is represented by a large platter form at Ariana, where his glass is shown throughout the year. "I usually work with bright, bold, rainbow colors," says Goldhagen, a North Carolina artist trained at Tulane University. I've made meno- ras, candlesticks, dreidels and kiddush cups.' Lauren Cohen, who graduated from the Center for Creative Studies, is showing her glass work at the Prism Contemporary Glass Gallery in Pontiac. "I will be showing glass and metal sculp- ture," explains Cohen, who lives in Franklin. "I have cocoon forms with glass pushing out from copper wire. I explore the metamorpho- sis of a self-contained spirit to the freeness and rebirth felt with water and the tranquility experienced in the bathtub. I prefer working