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Glass artist Fran Carrico works in her home studio.
John P. Cleary / The Herald Bulletin


Glass artist Fran Carrico. Using a small torch Carrico heats up long colored sticks of glass to shape into the different pieces of her artwork.
John P. Cleary / The Herald Bulletin


Glass artist Fran Carrico. Carrico uses long colored sticks of glass to make the different pieces of her artwork.
John P. Cleary / The Herald Bulletin


Published April 30, 2008 08:29 pm - PENDLETON - When Fran Carrico gets fired up for her hobby and new career, she gets a propane torch, an oxygen tank and kiln.

Career in glass heating up for ex-teacher


By Scott Miley

PENDLETON - When Fran Carrico gets fired up for her hobby and new career, she gets a propane torch, an oxygen tank and kiln.

Carrico is a glass artist, gaining renown for her fluidity in how her work interacts with light.

An exhibition of her work, “Liquidity in Hot Glass,” will go on display today at ArtWorks Gallery, 301 S. Walnut St., Muncie. An opening reception will be from 5 to 8 p.m. today.

Her specialty is Italian wound glass beadwork — a soft, moldable material — sculpted into the shapes of fish, flowers, seahorses and other designs.

She enjoys exploring the reaction between colors.

Aqua glass contains copper. Ivory holds sulfur. Combined they can create a black line of copper sulfide in a pattern.

Such reactions hold fascination for Carrico, who retired after teaching chemistry for 31 years at Highland High School.

“It intrigues me, the color reaction. Sometimes you like it, sometimes you absolutely don’t,” she said.

“There’s a lot of physics in the properties of glass that allow you to work with it. It doesn’t have a melting point.

“It softens over a whole range of temperatures and that’s what allows you to work it. If it had a melting point, you couldn’t do anything with it.”

In other words, instead of attempting to sculpt a liquid, working with glass is more like designing taffy.

In 2005, while at Highland, she received an $8,000 Teacher Creativity Fellowship from Lilly Endowment which allows educators a chance to pursue self-designed plans for personal and professional renewal.

Carrico spent that summer traveling to glass factories in Oregon, Washington and West Virginia, taking classes in glass alchemy, among others.

“I thought I was going to be a glassblower,” she said.

But she found that was a “team sport” where she would have had to rent a furnace and operators. She felt better fit to working in an area by herself on the enclosed back porch at her Pendleton home.



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