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© Kristof Vrancken
© MBE
© Kristof Vrancken
© Niels Ole Frandsen

Maria Bang Espersen

  • Glass sculptor
  • Boda Glasbruk, Sweden
  • Master Artisan
Maria Bang Espersen Glass sculptor
Contact
Swedish, Danish, English
Hours:
By appointment only
Phone:
+46 763285521
© Dorte Krogh

Capturing the elasticity of glass

  • • Maria has her unique methods of glass working
  • • Her creation process celebrates immediacy
  • • She creates delicate art objects

Maria Bang Espersen enjoys following untraditional creative processes using unconventional tools. She developed her own method of blowing hot glass by using compressed air instead of her own breath. The process can continue until explosion and glass shells convert into fine threads. Her objects made from melted glass, stretched and folded, appear soft and light with candy-like mother-of-pearl surfaces. Using simply kevlar gloves, she is able to shape the glass by hand in the last seconds of its fluidity, forever capturing the intangible softness of heat. These abstract sculptures mesmerise with the immediacy of their production process.

Read the full interview

Works

  • © MBE
  • © MBE
  • © MBE
  • © MBE
  • © MBE
Photo: © MBE
Curve in Coral

The piece belongs to a group titled Soft Series. It perfectly encapsulates the wonders of glass as it shows us its ability to be both clear and opaque, appear soft while being hard. After stretching and folding hot glass, Maria used nothing but kevlar gloves to shape it by hand. Therefore, in the last seconds of its fluidity, she was able to forever capture the intangible softness of heat.

Length 40 ml
Depth 13 cm
Height 21 cm

Photo: © MBE
A Circle

Nine years ago, Maria tested out what would happen if she stretched and folded hot glass, transforming the solid form into thousands of fine threads. The soft and silky outcome has developed over the years as a result of dedicated teamwork with her assistants and the development of unconventional tools (custom-made blowpipe, metal tube and large garden sheers). Hung tightly against the wall they appear to be made from a malleable material and smudged directly onto the wall.

Length 60 ml
Depth 7 cm

Photo: © MBE
Teasing Gold-Brown

When solid glass is stretched and folded multiple times and then twisted around on itself, it starts to assemble a much softer material, it becomes silky in its appearance. Maria manipulated concrete to represent aspects of softness, though the result is indeed as hard as glass. The two objects fit perfectly together as one was placed on top of the other while curing.

Width 27 ml
Height 35 cm
Depth 25 cm

Photo: © MBE
Soft

Poetically and aesthetically, these objects tell a story about the special qualities of glass. How it has the ability to be both clear and opaque, soft and hard at the same time. Hot glass is so easily shaped and Maria aimed to capture that moment in its cold form.

Width 36 ml
Height 20 cm
Depth 15 cm

Photo: © MBE
The Air Within

Maria tends to work around the idea that all things are malleable. Therefore, her experimental work with glass is not only a technique, but also a statement. One that states never to be caught up in restrictive norms or to obey established hierarchies, but to rather be liberated from other’s restrictions and transform them into positive forms.

Height 106 cm
Width 107 cm
Depth 8 cm

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