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A Glass Master Displays the Art of Conservation
Sculptor Erwin Timmers, shown at his Washington Glass School studio in Prince George's County, uses recycled glass in his works, some of which "focus on seeing the world through the future generation's eyes." Below left, Timmers cuts glass to rearrange and melt in a kiln.
(Photos By Sora Devore For The Washington Post)
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Since last year I've been teaching a glass recycling class. A lot of people have been wondering what to do with old pieces of glass but didn't quite know what to do with them. We get really creative; there's no set path for what you have to do with these things. It's totally open to your imagination.
I also teach metal classes mostly geared toward the technology of welding, and recycling odd objects that you have in your house. A lot of people have stuff sitting around that they like: an old light, a toaster, just odd stuff. What we do here is change them into something funky. Before I was working with glass I turned all sorts of metal stuff into lights: old plumbing fixtures, old mufflers, old office chairs, old gate bits.
You've created some noteworthy public sculptures with your colleagues. Where can people see them?
One big project we did was the courtyard of the EPA building [Ariel Rios Building, 12th Street between Constitution and Pennsylvania avenues NW]. It was a very nice way to go about it, to have everything all tie in together. The sculpture we did there was part of a big water-recycling effort using runoff water from roofs. . . . They did the whole courtyard with plants or items that were somehow recycled. We did the signage for those items using numbers out of old recycled agricultural items: old plows and shears and stuff like that. We chopped them up and made numbers out of each one.
The other notable one is the Prince George's County Courthouse [14735 Main St., Upper Marlboro]. The old courthouse burned down. . . . The roof was the part that was salvageable, so they asked artists to come up with ways to reuse copper. Copper is one of the few metals you can infuse into glass. We used it in recycled glass tiles, and they're now hanging outside one of the courtrooms in the new expansion.
What about glass makes it a good art material?
It has a fascination that is hard to describe. It's very hard, yet it looks fragile and delicate. What I often do is I kind of make a point out of showing that juxtaposition. A lot of sculptures make it look like the glass is being stretched out.
How do you feel about all the attention the green movement is getting?
I've been doing this for decades now, but now all of a sudden there's a lot more interest from art collectors and galleries, and also architects and designers. We're at a point in our lifetime in our society where we really have to start making a change in the way we interact with our environment. Minimizing my impact, making a statement through art and talking about it, that for me has become the most important focus. . . . It's like this blossoming of something I've been working on for so long. To finally get other people to see it the same way and to get some recognition for it -- I'm psyched.
No Pane, No Gain
Inspired? Erwin Timmers and his Washington Glass School colleagues teach others to make green masterpieces. Their next round of classes -- from a Beginner's Glass Lover's Weekend ($300) to a Polaroid Emulsion Transfer Workshop ($220) -- starts in January; for more information, see http:/
-- E.H.


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