Artist-glassmaker David Hopman returned to Amador
County in California's Sierra Foothills after many years in the San Francisco
Bay Area. A graduate in zoology from U.C. Davis he was working at Stanford when
he focused his artistic interest on glass. Several years ago he began studying
glassblowing at San Jose State. In 2000 he decided to devote full time to his
art. As a zoologist and avid scuba diver he is strongly influenced by the natural
world. It inspires the colors and patterns he utilizes in the classic and freeform
blown shapes he creates. Using a state of the art electric furnace he melts glass
batch brought in from the Netherlands. He then adds colors that come from as far
away as New Zealand. Working the glass at over 2100 degrees, he blows and hand
shapes the piece to achieve a wide array of forms. Many of the color patterns
he has devised depend on complex and ever variable interactions between the compounds
used in the different color stocks. His work is presently showing in Northern
California, Ohio and Florida galleries. Heather Hopman
works in a variety of mediums including lampworked soft glass beads, ceramics,
gourds, metalworking, blown glass and watercolors. She was born and raised in
Amador County. |