Treasures from the Vault: Toots Zynsky

Sachi Yanari-Rizzo, Research Curator

A gallery with walls and lighting tinting everything a light powder pink color. Straight ahead in the photo are two framed works of art. To the right are colorful glass vases and bowls on pedestals. To the left is a glass sculpture in front of a wall with more framed art. Three spotlights run along the edge of the ceiling, and the room has light brown hardwood floors.
Toots Zynsky, Lavender/Amber/Black, 1991, is exhibited in the foreground to the right. Installation view from Clearly Art: Pilchuckโ€™s Glass Legacy, 1995. Image courtesy of FWMoAย 

Toots Zynskyโ€™s work is immediately memorable; it is striking and distinctive. My first encounter was in a 1995 exhibition at the FWMoA entitled Clearly Art: Pilchuckโ€™s Glass Legacy and later in the 1999 exhibition Clearly Inspired: Contemporary Glass and Its Origins. Both exhibitions showcased her work in glass threads using a process that she developed and calls filet-de-verre.ย 

Zynsky was among Dale Chihulyโ€™s first students back when there were only glass classes and not an official program at Rhode Island School of Design, where she received a B.F.A in 1973. In 1971, she joined the group that helped found the Pilchuck School of Glass. Enchanted, she explained, โ€œGlassblowing fascinated me because you had to move, and it required a social environment where everyone had to cooperate. But mostly there was this fantastic material that seemed very alive.โ€iย ย 

Contemporary studio glassโ€™ early period was an age of exploration. Fueled with curiosity, this generation of artists pioneered new techniques and approaches, exploring the medium more fully. Chihuly encouraged Zynsky to research and experiment. Feeling restricted working on the blow pipe, Zynsky worked in video, performance art, and installation.  

Returning to glass, Zynsky was fascinated by the materialโ€™s disparate nature of being fragile yet strong. She began combining blown forms and fused glass threads. In the Corning Museum of Glass’ Clipped Glass (1982) she created her first piece made up entirely of hand pulled threads. This led to her collaboration with Dutch designer and inventor Mathijs Teunissen Van Manen. While visiting New York, he saw her work and visited her studio. Recognizing the labor intensiveness of the traditional Venetian method of pulling threads manually, Van Manen helped Zynsky mechanize the production of her materials.  

Zynsky lived in Europe for 16 years during the mid-1980s through the 1990s. In 1984 Venini Glassworks in Murano invited her to make unique blown glass works, resulting in the Folto and Chiacchiera vases. In the Netherlands, Zynsky and Van Manen, with some help in fiber optics from Corning back in the U.S., researched and developed a machine that moves glass cane through hot flames and pulls it into thread. The artist calculates that the amount of glass threads she has pulled during her career could wrap around the world several times. 

A glass bowl with folded edges imitating a stiff piece of fabric. It it made up of hundreds of lines, all moving in the same direction on the surface of the bowl. These lines are black, blue, purple, green, red, and orange. The bowl appears to be roughly the size and shape of a cereal bowl.
Toots Zynsky (American, b. 1951)ย Untitled from the Exotic Bird series. Filet-de-verre fused and thermo-formed colored glass threads, 1987. Gift in Memory of Sylvia Fendel, Yale Fendel and Max Rosenbach, 2020.190. Image courtesy of FWMoA

The FWMoAโ€™s untitled work dates to 1987 and is from the Exotic Bird series. Zynsky grew up with easy access to the woods and marshes in northeast Massachusetts and its vast variety of woodland birds and waterfowl. While the artist does not literally depict specific birds in the series, perhaps the works make us think of the intensely colored feathers and the thick layers of plumage of birds from such places as Central and South America.  

A close up on the rim and interior of the glass bowl. The threads are running alongside each other and overlapping in some places. Blue, red, and purple create a horizontal and curved striped pattern inside the bowl. Black and blue alternate on the section of the rim that is visible.
Toots Zynsky (American, b. 1951)ย Detail from Untitled from the Exotic Bird series. Filet-de-verre fused and thermo-formed colored glass threads, 1987. Gift in Memory of Sylvia Fendel, Yale Fendel and Max Rosenbach, 2020.190. Image courtesy of FWMoA

Above all, our work from the Exotic Bird series seems to visualize movement. Glass thread lines, akin to gestural brushstrokes, follow the rhythmic curving folds that shape the vessel. The series followed a research project in Ghana where she recorded traditional music and found Ghanaians’ use of vibrant color and pattern inspiring and liberating. Zynsky described, โ€œLaying out the glass threads as I build up each piece prior to its firing and forming is identical mentally to making a drawing or painting. My drawings sometimes inform my use of color in my glasswork, but my use of color is directly connected to the music I am constantly listening to. Music and color are virtually inseparable to me.โ€iiย ย 

A woman with light skin working at a counter in an art studio. In the background we see metal shelves with colorful materials stacked next to each other. The woman has medium brown hair, orange glasses, and is leaning forward with outstretched hands holding a long, dark strand of glass.
Toots Zynsky at work in her studio. Image courtesy of Toots Zynsky Studioย 

Zynskyโ€™s innovative process involves placing thousands of colorful thin glass filaments in layers on a round fiberboard plate with a circular or oval template. It is heat resistant and dusted with dry plaster and rice paper. While in earlier work she showed a predilection for primary colors and opaque glass, like in FWMoAโ€™s work, her later addition of transparent glass yields blended colors through overlapping and different effects with the variance of light. She explained, โ€œโ€™Thatโ€™s why I keep working with glass, because it has this beautiful ever-changing life. You never see a piece the same way twice.โ€™โ€iii 

The threads fuse together in a kiln, taking anywhere from three and a half to four hours. Zynsky inserts preliminary molds to give form along the rim. Then she uses a series of preheated bowl-shaped metal molds, slumping the glass, as the material pulls downwards into the mold. Having a background in glassblowing, it was natural for her to work with the form while fusing and slumping in the kiln. She subtly beckons curves and folds freely by hand and inverts the work. Then the piece is allowed to cool slowly in a kiln and is cleaned.  

A glass bowl composed of horizontal and vertical stripes. The bold colors are light green, teal, pink, yellow, brown, and purple. Most of the stripes are horizontal, traveling from one side of the rim to the other. The purple and light green stripes of color surround the bowl horizontally. The rim of the bowl has been stretched while hot in points a few inches apart from each other. The result is similar to the splashes made by raindrops.
Italian, Venice, Murano. Roman-style bowl with clear and multicolored band decoration. Glass, ca. 1870. Metropolitan Museum of Art. Public domainย 

Glass vessels have rich historical traditions and Zynsky brings a different perspective on them. One precedent is ribbon glass, a form of mosaic glass, which emerged in Rome in the first century BCE. In examples, like Ribbon Glass Cup from the Corning Museum of Glass, the work is made up of brightly colored glass cane that fuse and slump over a mold, transforming  what were originally straight, colorful lines into striped, curved parabolas. Artists revived interest in this art form during the 19th century, seen in the Metropolitan Museum of Artโ€™s bowl (ca. 1860) from Murano. The wave pattern along the bowlโ€™s rim was created by pulling the hot glass with pincers.iv Zynsky explains that she initially created works in stripes to test the compatibility of the materials. 

Zynsky enjoys working with the vessel form as the viewer can experience the work from different angles and heights. She commented, โ€œโ€™You can never see the whole piece at once. Thereโ€™s always something mysterious, no matter at what angle or in what light youโ€™re looking at the piece. It forces you to move around it.โ€™โ€v 

Zynskyโ€™s love of birds continued and her environmental concerns emerged in the Endangered Species series, as she became aware of the stark decline of the bird population, notably around her childhood home. Her first works in the series coincided with the 2018 State of the Worldโ€™s Birds 1970-2020 report which estimated that North America, for example, has lost three billion birds. The series touches on species from all seven continents, including birds that were prevalent during her childhood. The works show parallels between the structure of feathers and her process. Studying the layering of colors and patterns, Zynskyโ€™s Endangered Species is her attempt to approximate the beauty of her subjects and her emotional response.  


To see other compelling glass art in person, visit the FWMoA Glass Wing during your next visit!


iย Shawn Waggoner, โ€œToots Zynskyโ€™s Filet-de-Verre Vessels: A Translation of Music into Color,โ€ย Glass Artย 33, no. 4 (July/August 2018): 13.ย 

iiย Shawn Waggoner, โ€œToots Zynsky: A Conversation with the Artist,โ€ย Glass Artย 26, no. 5 (July/August 2011): 35.ย 

iiiย Waggoner, โ€œToots Zynskyโ€™s Filet-de-Verre Vessels,โ€ p.ย 13.ย 

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