Glass
Education/Experience
-1993-1995, Punahou High School, student of Hugh Jenkins
-1995-2001, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, student of George Jercich
-Summer of 2001, Pilchuck Glass School, Solid Sculpting techniques, student
of Dino Rosin
-Summer of 2002, Carlton Studios, Venetian Goblet Making Workshop, 1st assistant
to Elio Quarisa
-1998-2002, Phoenix Studios, apprenticeship under Carl Radke
-Summer of 2005, Jam Factory AUS, Venetian Goblet Making, student of James
Mongrain
-2002-present, Central Coast Glass Artists Studio, Cofounder |
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About the Artist
I feel fortunate to have the opportunity to work with hot glass. It’s
been my path for the exploration of my identity as an artist, an American
artist who is half Japanese and half Caucasian. Growing up surfing in
Hawaii, I spent a lot of time in the ocean. I loved the water, and how
it moved. I found that if I flowed with the water, surfing went smoothly,
but if I became stiff and lost my fluidity, I would loose control. Hot
glass is like the ocean. It takes a fluid touch. Whenever I shape a piece
of glass, I feel like I have a little piece of hot molten ocean in my
hands. Being able to create forms, vibrant colors, and optical illusions
from a liquid has fascinated me from the moment I was first exposed to
the glass blowing process. Since then I’ve been in love, and completely
hooked.
I had the unique opportunity to go to one of the only high schools in
the nation with a hot glass studio. It was at Punahou School on the island
of Oahu that Hugh Jenkins first put a blowpipe in my hands. I spent a
year there in an excellent program learning the basics and trying to figure
out how to work with this strange and tricky material. I wasn’t
ready to give up blowing glass after graduating from high school in 1995.
So when I found I could study both art and engineering at Cal Poly State
University in San Luis Obispo, I couldn’t resist and came to California.
Here I studied under the interesting glass-sculpting professor, George
Jercich. George made me look at glass from a different direction. Between
the years of 1998 to 2002 I had the opportunity to apprentice under Carl
Radke at Phoenix Studios in Harmony, California. Carl, who is a master
of Tiffany style Art Nouveau glass, taught me techniques that have been
essential to the development of my color application and approach to blowing.
During the summer of 2001 I studied off hand solid sculpting from the
Italian Maestro Dino Rosin, at Pilchuck, near Seattle, Washington. This
has opened the door to a whole new world of possibilities. Early in 2003
I cofounded, and built the Central Coast Glass Artist Studio, a facility
for the creative exploration of glass. All my current work is made in
this facility. I’ve been lucky in that I’ve always been able
to design my own pieces. The process of concocting an image in my mind,
and making that image reality through a piece of molten glass keeps me
continually excited about my work.
From the first time I touched hot glass to now, glass has become my main
passion in life. I am lucky to have been at the right places at the right
times. If all goes well my exploration can continue.

Goblet Workshop, Jam Factory AUS
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