If you can't stand the heat, get
out of the kitchen." That's an apt saying for
many people, but not for Christian Thirion. He left
the kitchen, and a career as a master pastry chef,
for the hot shop and a new career as a glassblower.
"
"But the family business dictated that Thirion
follow in the steps of his grandmother and father,
both bakers. So, at the age of 14, Thirion began
an intensive three-year apprenticeship in Belfort,
France, to become a pastry chef. Up at 5 a.m. every
day, he took inspiration from a huge stone lion
several stories high built by Frederic Auguste Bartholdi,
sculptor of the Statue of Liberty, to commemorate
French resistance fighters who fought so tenaciously
for the town. Only 17 in his class of 36 graduated.
The loss of his mother in 1978
made him realize how important it is to take a chance
and follow your heart. So when he saw an advertisement
in the local newspaper for a pastry chef in Chicago,
he thought he would go see what it was all about.
"The address in the paper was in the next town,
which only had about 15 houses," remembers
Thirion. He couldn't miss it, he says, because the
American flag was hanging on the front. To him,
the man who answered the door "looked like
Davy Crockett in a suede jacket and red hair."
He handed Thirion a business card to call the States.
Thirion didn't speak English but somehow managed
and two months later he had his immigration papers
as part of an international exchange between two
chambers of commerce.
Thirion moved to California in
1980. He started a restaurant, then worked in construction,
plumbing and landscaping but never lost his interest
in glass.
"I started to work with stained
glass in 1984 and found myself spending hours watching
a well-known glassblower in his neighboring studio,"
says Thirion. In 1987, he decided to sign up for
a course in glassmaking advertised at the city college
in Santa Barbara. "The moment I handled the
pipe with molten glass and placed the glass on my
block," says Thirion, "I said 'This is
it. This is what I want to do.'" He left pastry
to pursue glass-blowing full time. He convinced
the teacher to let him attend extra sessions, then
became a teaching assistant so he could have studio
time.
After blowing glass for two years
in Seattle, Wash., where he refined his technique
he relocated to the Finger Lakes region of New York
in 1992. That year he received at commission to
create several large pieces for a restaurant in
Toyko. When one piece broke in packing on the way
to a show, a friend in Corning offered his studio
to remake the piece. For the first time, Thirion
visited the Corning Museum of Glass, and he decided
to stay in the area.
"Glass is a learning process.
I continue to discover new ways to apply color,
textures and techniques to enhance my work,"
says Thirion. "I'm always learning."
If there's a thread to his life and his work, it's
movement. His friends call him the "gypsy glassblower,"
he says, because he has moved around so much. His
art glass is a blend of classic elegance and fluid
forms.