You work in both sculpture and functional lighting. What do you feel your purely sculptural work conveys?
I guess it reveals my desire to connect with people. I’m constantly looking for common denominators, for traits and experiences we all share. Energetically, we all come from the same source, and one of my theories is that consciousness is a material. It’s a shared entity, and part of me wants to affirm that physical interdependence. Another word for consciousness is light, which, as I’ve already said, is one of the chief characteristics of molten glass.
Your Paris studio is at street level, with floor-to-ceiling windows, so you are intentionally on display.
Yes, because I have this commitment to promote and revive the art of glassblowing. We regularly take on students as interns, and it’s heartwarming to see the younger children, on their way to school, with their faces glued to the windows.
You’ve had a couple of serious accidents in your life, one involving a car, in which you came close to dying. Was that experience philosophically or psychologically pivotal?
Yes. In those few minutes I thought I had left to live, I was full of regret. Since then I’m fierce about pursuing my passions so that I never again have to face any regrets. Life is not only short, it’s a one-shot deal.
JMW Studio is available through Kneedler Fauchère.