|
|
|||||||
|
|||||||
The Glass Menagerie-- MORE |
|||||
ID 2001.130.1
Miniature Glass Figures Made by Henry Carter Johnson 1955-1985 Gift of Ruth Totten Johnson |
Henry
Carter Johnson (1908-1996) was born in Saginaw, Michigan but moved soon
after to Detroit. A trained painter and sculptor, Johnson discovered the
art of glassmaking while living in New York during the early 1930s. He
worked briefly as a WPA artist in Winter Park, Florida during the late
1930s and served as a photographer and surgical artist for the U.S. Army
Medical Corps during World War II. After the war, he returned to his Hart,
Michigan farmhouse where he continued to experiment with glassmaking and
began to demonstrate his craft each summer in the nearby town of Pentwater
on Lake Michigan. Johnson’s figures were not blown, but were formed by heating colored glass rods to temperatures up to 3000 degrees Fahrenheit and drawing them into shapes that ranged from the slender, delicate legs of a deer to the graceful sweep of a fish fin. This process of forming a multicolored creature was complex, for each color of glass had a different melting temperature. Heating the glass too much changed its color and excessive reheating altered its composition. Johnson soon learned the perfect combination of color and form for each of his designs. Henry Johnson’s official title for his business was always “Fine Miniatures in Glass,” although “The Glass Menagerie” became the informal, and ultimately, more popular title among his fans. In 1972, Johnson moved to the small town of Ferry, Michigan, where he continued to fashion his glass figures until shortly before his death in 1996. Johnson, also a nature photographer, had his photographs featured in publications that included the New York Times and Natural History Magazine. He also sold many photographs to the Audubon Society.
|
Copyright © The Henry Ford ~ http://www.TheHenryFord.org |