Kudos to the NARRATOR: Best job of explaining the process I have EVER heard in ANY of this type of video. You have excellent skill in narration. Thank you. The video was also of excellent quality.
I was listening while doing something I didn't look up till he said we've been into it for an hour and a half. I didn't even realize we had been into it for an hour and a half. soothing voice I can probably even go to sleep to that. and the artist cool too. Very cool
Thank you for providing educational content for free. RUclips is amazing and so full of entertainment and info, but the multiple video angles, Japanese experts willing to demonstrate their skill and helpful narrator make this a fully engaging video.
Whoever was the narrating did a tremendous job of guiding us through the intricate processes with great detail that helped me understand at a much simpler level. Hats off to you. Wonderful job!
Yes!!! Best emcee job ever!!! Even after blowing glass for years, it was enlightening to hear things put in different terms. Of course the piece was crazy too!
I never realized how much work goes into glass blowing...the apprenticeship all the people involved that make these works of art....its really impressive. Thank you for posting this !
The way that man's mind throughout history has even been able to come up with such concepts is mind blowing.. how did it originate? Was it watching the natural environment as the volcano for example that had molten lava began to harden.. and created a glass like substance.. but to continually refine the art of what they do.. shows the level of creativity and imagination and understanding... the desire to learn and improve on what already is... yet to make something realistic and beautiful from within that. One small understanding can lead to such a whole new world of achievement.. this was how men inspired me to want to try new things. Because they opened themselves up through videos like this.
Thank you for posting a full real-time video of the process along with commentary. Glass is not something I would ever work in but knowing all that goes into making a masterful piece of hand crafted glass gives me a deeper appreciation for it.
I remember my tour at Corning in 1984. I'm delighted to see that the tours are still popular. I enjoyed watching the process of glass making. It was a revelation!
I really enjoyed watching this video. The artists work is beautiful, he has a team who is friendly and hardworking. The commentator was nice to listen to. Over all an amazing video, and you realize how much work goes into one beautiful piece of art. Thank you Masahiro,for sharing your art and time with us.
I love to see them make these big pieces! An absolute master at work! His team worked together so smoothly. The gaffer must have been so tired after all that heavy work. I've watched many episodes and its the first I see a bubble pulled. This master's creativity is astounding. Who would have thought a spiral of bubbles can be so beautiful. Thanks for sharing your skills Masahiro Sasaki. Keep these videos with biiiiiggggg pieces comming Corning museum.
Their work is absolutely amazing and stunning but the narrator steals the show for me, I admire him for just talking the entire time, I'd run out of things to talk about pretty quickly! And he actually cracked some jokes and was very informative and entertaining
Thanks for putting this on RUclips. It's nice to have a knowledgeable person explain his perspective of another knowledge person's process. Really awesome video.
I just found this glass show while I was paruzing for some cool stuff.I just think the announcer did such an awesome job his commentary was quite good.So hats off to you.Sincerely Diz.
I just spend almost 2 hours watching them create glass into what looks like an enhanced one cell microscopic organism?. Great teamwork. Red glass would have been so cool. 😊😉❤️
japanese names just make everything instantly sound +10 points cooler. i cant get enough of this channel. the glass casting video was particularly amazing. and the glass ocular prosthetics. id love to see someone make some glass blades, even if theyre non functional. glass daggers and stuff just sound epic
I visited the Corning museum many years ago and it was an excellent experience I will never forget!! It is truly an amazing place with amazing glassware!! I would recommend it to any one who loves glass especially antique pieces!! Love and respect Tamsen Roberts in Riverside California....
My first visit was in 1962 on a family vacation, and it actually motivated me to get a degree in glass, ceramics, and enamel. Even at 75, I still dabble in all three media, and combine them freely. The museum was quite small in '62, but already had a formidable collection. Watching the museum grow incrementally over the decades has been remarkable! I still have the small Steuben piece we bought my mother for Xmas that first trip. So exciting to be able to sample these videos in my insomnia.
I just started watching your channel and it's the perfect teamwork and atmosphere to watching sports but with glass so you have something cool to show for it. I'm lovin' it! Thank you all!
I don't think Masahiro Sasaki have the same idea about glass as we normal people do... I believe glass masters forget the real property of glass while they work on them, they see them very very differently than a normal mind can conceive :) Corning Museum, Thank you for this channel and posting all this great art work in making 👏👏👏
I just love these videos. I know this all happened three years ago, but I still kept finding myself holding my breath, heart racing with the excitement of heat, breath, gravity, oh my, what a skill this is.
Watching him and his team work together with barely a word spoken between them is a beautiful thing that can only come from trust and knowledge of their craft, absolutely amazing to watch. I've always wanted to learn to blow glass, not so much art pieces even though that would be cool but more along the lines of making pipes lol.
Such an amazing art form. Watching masters at work, no matter the form,is so enjoyable to me. My grandfather made cellos. I loved his workroom and was the only grandchild allowed in there due to the fact I was quiet and learned different skills so I could help in my mall way.
That was so awesome. Thank you commentator for letting us know what/why was happening. I watched this video from the very beginning and I thought at least you could show us the final piece. 😢
I was looking at this, and it made me think of some art work I saw of a creature of rain or river serpent I remembered. To look at the creature. Shows the same forward motion of a spiral. Had to make sure I did not get it mixed up with some art work pieces from China. Glad he brought the slide show pictures, to give us an idea of what he was going for. Other wise it just reminded me of a sea cucumber. It is amazing piece.
I think I've seen sculptures similar to what you are describing by a Chinese guy I believe it was and he made serpant like peaces that where also clear and kind of dragon like
Absolutely amazing work! His pieces remind me of the seed pods on some of our Aussie trees (before sandblasting that is.) And you have a very soothing voice btw
At 1:42 minutes: the piece is getting heavy! Great job carrying it back & forth without ever touching the sides or knocking off any spikes! That was intense! Very beautiful and well done
I’m so glad someone asked if the glass would smush or shatter when dropped! I was wondering the exact same thing and Google had no idea what I was looking for haha! 😂
That apres coldwork finished piece blew me away. Had no idea it would turn into that and was wondering why his bubble was so thin. Thanks for not cutting out reheats. Seeing how long they're in there for adds a lot to our collective understanding of heats.
Masahiro Sasaki and Assistants, Excellent craftsmanship, artistry and also entertaining at the same time! One can use their imagination to see a likeness to what is present in Life. The arrangement also reminds of Hershey Kisses! Mahalo from Hawai’i
If there is a class about showing anything and they’re coming from Japan. I will definitely want to be there. Japanese people take their job seriously and they’re REALLY GOOD at it.
8:03 that huge chunk is putting out so much heat they have to put a baffle over his hand so it won't burn him being that close to it. That rod probably gets pretty hot too.
As a maker all my life, molten glass is a material beyond my experience, I am in awe of the magic, crafts persons dedication and exquisite fragility of the process. Though in the masterclass demonstration shown, Masahero's piece is primarily the 'nuts and bolts' of the finished sculpture. I would have been fascinated to see the following processes to completion. Though I also understand that an artist needs to keep some mystery about technique. Thank you for the work you are doing for the medium and in showing us examples.
watching glass blowing and pottery are relaxing to me, i love watching a blob become something so cool. thank you for sharing these different styles with us. do you have anyone who does flowers or bugs? glass flowers i look at with awe, so delicate.this is asmr for me.
Hi Ramona, a couple of recommendations from our channel come to mind. Kim Fields made a red poppy on the torch in this demo: ruclips.net/video/0cUsOa8cFTE/видео.html. Wes Fleming and Mike Mangiafico made bugs on the torch in this demo: ruclips.net/video/_88WF4-abxo/видео.html. Thanks for watching!
Watching this glass piece going in and out of the heating oven scares me. I keep thinking someone is going to crash the piece against one of the doors that hasn’t been opened.
I'm so glad I'm not the only one who was like... oh... oh wow... wait, did he just say...? Heh ok... 👀 *continues watching intently* even amidst all the clearly innuendo-like commentary, just in awe of how well the jokes are either writing themselves here, innocently...orrrr he is masterful at keeping a straight face, knowing full well he's being inappropriate. Which, I would absolutely applaud.
Kudos to the NARRATOR: Best job of explaining the process I have EVER heard in ANY of this type of video. You have excellent skill in narration. Thank you. The video was also of excellent quality.
Give props to the commentator. He was so good literally sat through every minute,
@@user-yo6um3jn5k I thought I was the only one lmao. Choking up on the pipe… glory whole … come on and not one snicker ..skills lol
My immediate thoughts as well. He kept it interesting for sure. Seemed like a pretty cool dude too.
@@user-yo6um3jn5k more than twice 😊
I was listening while doing something I didn't look up till he said we've been into it for an hour and a half. I didn't even realize we had been into it for an hour and a half. soothing voice I can probably even go to sleep to that. and the artist cool too. Very cool
I had to turn on the CC, he spoke too softly. Why?
Thank you for providing educational content for free. RUclips is amazing and so full of entertainment and info, but the multiple video angles, Japanese experts willing to demonstrate their skill and helpful narrator make this a fully engaging video.
You're welcome; it's our pleasure to share glass with the world. Thanks for watching!
Whoever was the narrating did a tremendous job of guiding us through the intricate processes with great detail that helped me understand at a much simpler level. Hats off to you. Wonderful job!
I love watching the masters at work be it glass, swords, woodworking, etc. So fascinating
We do too, thanks for watching!
Agree 100
Me too. It is a PASSION
💞😻🌹
@@marleneorein9484 - great minds think alike
masters of nosepicking, volume 3 of 5? how about masters of.... being boring?
Yes!!! Best emcee job ever!!! Even after blowing glass for years, it was enlightening to hear things put in different terms. Of course the piece was crazy too!
I never realized how much work goes into glass blowing...the apprenticeship all the people involved that make these works of art....its really impressive. Thank you for posting this !
The way that man's mind throughout history has even been able to come up with such concepts is mind blowing.. how did it originate? Was it watching the natural environment as the volcano for example that had molten lava began to harden.. and created a glass like substance.. but to continually refine the art of what they do.. shows the level of creativity and imagination and understanding... the desire to learn and improve on what already is... yet to make something realistic and beautiful from within that.
One small understanding can lead to such a whole new world of achievement.. this was how men inspired me to want to try new things. Because they opened themselves up through videos like this.
Thanks for watching!
Aliens after they built the pyramids.
Alchemists
The earliest known glass objects, of the mid-third millennium BCE, were beads, perhaps initially created as accidental by-products of metal-working.
Thank you for posting a full real-time video of the process along with commentary. Glass is not something I would ever work in but knowing all that goes into making a masterful piece of hand crafted glass gives me a deeper appreciation for it.
I remember my tour at Corning in 1984. I'm delighted to see that the tours are still popular. I enjoyed watching the process of glass making. It was a revelation!
I really enjoyed watching this video. The artists work is beautiful, he has a team who is friendly and hardworking. The commentator was nice to listen to. Over all an amazing video, and you realize how much work goes into one beautiful piece of art. Thank you Masahiro,for sharing your art and time with us.
I love to see them make these big pieces! An absolute master at work! His team worked together so smoothly. The gaffer must have been so tired after all that heavy work. I've watched many episodes and its the first I see a bubble pulled. This master's creativity is astounding. Who would have thought a spiral of bubbles can be so beautiful. Thanks for sharing your skills Masahiro Sasaki. Keep these videos with biiiiiggggg pieces comming Corning museum.
Thanks for watching!
Whomever is narrating is such a pro, and what an attractive voice. :) Bravo my man!
Their work is absolutely amazing and stunning but the narrator steals the show for me, I admire him for just talking the entire time, I'd run out of things to talk about pretty quickly!
And he actually cracked some jokes and was very informative and entertaining
Thanks for watching!
Thanks for putting this on RUclips. It's nice to have a knowledgeable person explain his perspective of another knowledge person's process. Really awesome video.
I just found this glass show while I was paruzing for some cool stuff.I just think the announcer did such an awesome job his commentary was quite good.So hats off to you.Sincerely Diz.
Thanks for watching!
I just spend almost 2 hours watching them create glass into what looks like an enhanced one cell microscopic organism?. Great teamwork. Red glass would have been so cool. 😊😉❤️
I only watched because the guys narrative was so informative! They definitely picked the right guy for the job
Thanks for watching!
L
ya
lol
Yes let
Agreed, great job
This guys awesome
He knows what he’s talking about!
Swinging that glass around is panic inducing, awe inspiring & pure calculated chaos. It’s equally beautiful & terrifying to witness. 🙌🏻
Agreed, it's a very well-orchestrated dance; thanks for watching!
Legitimately what I thought EVERY TIIIIIIME he picked it up to put it back into the glory hole while attaching the spikes 😅😅
I would not think this would be something that would entertain me but watching the skills at work the commentary is on point just perfect.
The organic forms and method of production give a coral like effect. Very pretty and beautiful.
Thanks for watching!
japanese names just make everything instantly sound +10 points cooler. i cant get enough of this channel. the glass casting video was particularly amazing. and the glass ocular prosthetics. id love to see someone make some glass blades, even if theyre non functional. glass daggers and stuff just sound epic
I visited the Corning museum many years ago and it was an excellent experience I will never forget!! It is truly an amazing place with amazing glassware!! I would recommend it to any one who loves glass especially antique pieces!! Love and respect Tamsen Roberts in Riverside California....
My first visit was in 1962 on a family vacation, and it actually motivated me to get a degree in glass, ceramics, and enamel. Even at 75, I still dabble in all three media, and combine them freely. The museum was quite small in '62, but already had a formidable collection. Watching the museum grow incrementally over the decades has been remarkable! I still have the small Steuben piece we bought my mother for Xmas that first trip. So exciting to be able to sample these videos in my insomnia.
Best commentary in all of entertainment, action sports and live-artistry
I just started watching your channel and it's the perfect teamwork and atmosphere to watching sports but with glass so you have something cool to show for it. I'm lovin' it! Thank you all!
Thanks for watching, Marlene!
I don't think Masahiro Sasaki have the same idea about glass as we normal people do... I believe glass masters forget the real property of glass while they work on them, they see them very very differently than a normal mind can conceive :) Corning Museum, Thank you for this channel and posting all this great art work in making 👏👏👏
What an amazing demonstration! I watched until the very end. Everyone was very professional!!
So amazing! And the commentary is so interesting. Thank you for the video!
Thanks for watching!
Thanks for sharing. Really enjoy watching the team work.
Thanks for watching!
wow coldworked all the bubble away, that's epic ! Thanks for the content Corning !
Thanks for watching!
I just love these videos. I know this all happened three years ago, but I still kept finding myself holding my breath, heart racing with the excitement of heat, breath, gravity, oh my, what a skill this is.
The skill involved with glass work is pretty awesome. Thank you for the upload.
Thanks for watching!
Watching him and his team work together with barely a word spoken between them is a beautiful thing that can only come from trust and knowledge of their craft, absolutely amazing to watch.
I've always wanted to learn to blow glass, not so much art pieces even though that would be cool but more along the lines of making pipes lol.
That glass is a piece of work, it gives me such a calm vibe
Thanks for watching!
What a beautiful piece! Incredibly intense work! I love it.
This is great!! Thanks so much for posting on RUclips 👍
Such an amazing art form. Watching masters at work, no matter the form,is so enjoyable to me. My grandfather made cellos. I loved his workroom and was the only grandchild allowed in there due to the fact I was quiet and learned different skills so I could help in my mall way.
Amazing teamwork and such inspirational creativity! Thank you...
So beautiful and skillfully done glass blowing art piece.. Thanks for the Aowsom video❤
That was so awesome. Thank you commentator for letting us know what/why was happening. I watched this video from the very beginning and I thought at least you could show us the final piece. 😢
They did. Looked absolutely nothing like what we all saw as a finished product. Just needed to cool down? Nope.
I was looking at this, and it made me think of some art work I saw of a creature of rain or river serpent I remembered. To look at the creature. Shows the same forward motion of a spiral. Had to make sure I did not get it mixed up with some art work pieces from China.
Glad he brought the slide show pictures, to give us an idea of what he was going for. Other wise it just reminded me of a sea cucumber.
It is amazing piece.
I think I've seen sculptures similar to what you are describing by a Chinese guy I believe it was and he made serpant like peaces that where also clear and kind of dragon like
I really enjoyed the narration of this process and even the information about what is added to the glass and when color would have been added.
What an incredible artist. This is whats right with this world.
Thanks for watching!
Absolutely amazing work! His pieces remind me of the seed pods on some of our Aussie trees (before sandblasting that is.) And you have a very soothing voice btw
Thanks for watching!
I love to watch these artists work at their trade ❤❤❤
Wow, what an incredible team!!!! They are like well trained brain surgeons.
It’s good to hear they are bringing glass blowing to more people, but if I want to watch it, this is the best place.
❤Pure Awesomeness❤ great teamwork ,Incredible artistry❤
What an Artist, this is amazing!!!!
At 1:42 minutes: the piece is getting heavy!
Great job carrying it back & forth without ever touching the sides or knocking off any spikes! That was intense! Very beautiful and well done
Wow and the catcher! Way to much responsibility…master of their craft! Bravoooo!❤️❤️❤️❤️
This was so amazing to witness. Thank you for sharing and hosting this amazing talent and creation!
Thanks for watching!
Outstanding! Thank you Masahiro Sasaki!
Thanks for watching!
And by the way, next to Bill Gudenrath, this is the best narration I’ve heard on CMOG. Really interesting and informative.
Totally agree! We’ll done. There should be more credit to the commentators
Loved this so much! Thanks guys! I would love to see him sandblasting as well 😍
Thanks for watching!
Wow that piece ended up beautifully... I like the sand blasting very cool... Really very stunning ✌🏻💗😊❣️
Great work fantastic piece so much effort goes into it congratulations
Thanks for watching!
His finished work is gorgeous. He is a true artist. You can take time to appreciate the form and shapes within.
Thanks for watching!
Wow! I'm still at him swinging it around his body, and I'm so amazed. Can't wait to see the rest!
I loved seeing the layers pile up around the inner glass in the furnace
Why do I feel like I'm watching a sporting event?
But seriously, the process is a lot more intense than I had imagined.
Thanks for watching!
I’m so glad someone asked if the glass would smush or shatter when dropped! I was wondering the exact same thing and Google had no idea what I was looking for haha! 😂
Its a good question, my guess is the more heat the more the glass can flow around the rest of it and the less heat even still glowing can break apart
To my knowledge its more likely to break from being aloud to cool too quickly and it contracts and snaps.
@@kentuckysmoose Off the bat, he called him "Sasiki" ...
Well? The answer?
@@jasonnikolic When it's hot, it drops like honey.
So beautiful it takes my breath away thank you
Thanks for watching!
That apres coldwork finished piece blew me away. Had no idea it would turn into that and was wondering why his bubble was so thin. Thanks for not cutting out reheats. Seeing how long they're in there for adds a lot to our collective understanding of heats.
Thanks for watching!
A phenomenal piece of glass art.
Breathtakingly beautiful, such skill
Thanks for watching!
Master is always a master no doubt great pleasure to watch thanks god bless you and your family
Thanks for watching!
Excellent. just gorgeous. Very interest watching a master..
This is going to be spectacular!
Amazing.
Yeah I gotta question over there. Uh yeah how do you keep the camera from melting in that furnace ?
I had the same question lol
It isn’t in the furnace. They use a zoom/telephoto lens from a safe distance with a filter
He tells you in the stream. Its a window made to withstand intense heat. They film from the outside of the inside window lol.
Fantastic skills and collaboration,joy to watch,did skip and split into sections.
Narration diverts viewer's attention from the process. 1:45:53
Just beautiful. The spikes look like the spikes on the Japanese Puffer Fish.
Thanks for watching!
Masahiro Sasaki and Assistants,
Excellent craftsmanship, artistry and also entertaining at the same time!
One can use their imagination to see a likeness to what is present in Life. The arrangement also reminds of Hershey Kisses!
Mahalo from Hawai’i
Really cool stuff. My heart fell into my stomach at 1:32 mark when you heard the glass crack.
Such a innovative look.
Very organic
Thanks for watching!
I love the commentary. I learned a lot. Thank you.
That is amazing to watch, WOW ❤️👍
If there is a class about showing anything and they’re coming from Japan. I will definitely want to be there.
Japanese people take their job seriously and they’re REALLY GOOD at it.
Stay updated on all of our upcoming classes here: glassmaking.cmog.org/classes
I've always wanted to b a glass maker/blower...such a fascinating job and/or hobby.
I wish to see the finaly!
While in western Honshu with my students in 1999 I met a glass teacher/artist who studied at Corning in the 90s. She created beautiful lampwork beads.
Amazing. Thanks for the informative content.
Thanks for watching!
8:03 that huge chunk is putting out so much heat they have to put a baffle over his hand so it won't burn him being that close to it. That rod probably gets pretty hot too.
Amazing presentation!
I met a glass artist while in Western Honshu, Japan. She studied at Corning. Her speciality was lampwork beads.
As a maker all my life, molten glass is a material beyond my experience, I am in awe of the magic, crafts persons dedication and exquisite fragility of the process.
Though in the masterclass demonstration shown, Masahero's piece is primarily the 'nuts and bolts' of the finished sculpture.
I would have been fascinated to see the following processes to completion. Though I also understand that an artist needs to keep some mystery about technique.
Thank you for the work you are doing for the medium and in showing us examples.
Thanks for watching, Jeff!
Wow! Wow! Wow! Spectacular in every way.
Thanks for watching, Kathryn!
Beautiful work guys. Trying to train right now
Spectacularly well done!
watching glass blowing and pottery are relaxing to me, i love watching a blob become something so cool. thank you for sharing these different styles with us. do you have anyone who does flowers or bugs? glass flowers i look at with awe, so delicate.this is asmr for me.
Hi Ramona, a couple of recommendations from our channel come to mind. Kim Fields made a red poppy on the torch in this demo: ruclips.net/video/0cUsOa8cFTE/видео.html.
Wes Fleming and Mike Mangiafico made bugs on the torch in this demo: ruclips.net/video/_88WF4-abxo/видео.html. Thanks for watching!
@@corningmuseumofglass .
i seen this demo when you were live on here. thank you for putting it back up with the finished product. i have been curious how it turned out.
Thanks for watching!
Bob Wags You SAW...this demo when...👍
Caught myself gripping the arms of my chair watching him.
oh my THEY reall do call it a glory hole!
Excellent video
Thanks for watching!
I love it. Thanks for the upload.
Thanks for watching, Marlene!
Watching this glass piece going in and out of the heating oven scares me. I keep thinking someone is going to crash the piece against one of the doors that hasn’t been opened.
1:42:00 lopsided zucchini with moldy growths forming around it?
“Why do you call it a GLORY HOLE??!?!?”
As loud as I could ask. 😂😂😂😂
Can't believe I just watched 1 hr 45 mins of a bunch of professional BLOWERS inserting a giant glass SHAFT into a GLORY HOLE
Yea normally I watch that stuff like 3 minutes or so and I'm done with it.
I'm so glad I'm not the only one who was like... oh... oh wow... wait, did he just say...? Heh ok... 👀 *continues watching intently* even amidst all the clearly innuendo-like commentary, just in awe of how well the jokes are either writing themselves here, innocently...orrrr he is masterful at keeping a straight face, knowing full well he's being inappropriate. Which, I would absolutely applaud.
But also, just masterful work by the artist here. Worthwhile to watch, even if it hadn't been also hilarious due to the commentary.
,😂
🤣I Totally Agree
how much cost in energy did it take to make that one bauble of glass? $1000? Curious to know because that furnace doesn't heat itself!