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Dougherty Glassworks
Edition Three Feature
We Interview: Cameron Dougherty
Location: Vancouver, Canada
Photo Credit: ©Kassandra Taylor @the.socialrefinery
What is it that you do and how do you do it?
I am a glass artist, a glass-blower, a maker. I consider myself more of a craftsperson than a conceptual artist. I make my work at a shared glass-blowing studio, Terminal City Glass Co-op, where I’m also the studio manager. Technically, there are 180 members, but only about 40 or so are active. That’s everybody from bead makers to hobbyists to other production glass-blowers. I manage the studio, making sure that everybody has what they need, and when stuff gets broken, I fix it.
Two years ago, when I started as studio manager, I initially received two 4-hour blowing slots per week as a perk. It was a critical time for my business, where I was able to develop new designs without income. That’s when I came up with the thumb divot glass, which is my main bread-and-butter item and what made it viable to start scaling up my business. I now have a few other products that are picking up steam.
Terminal City is the only publicly accessible glass-blowing studio in Canada’s lower mainland, and it was one of the major determinants in moving to Vancouver. Other than the fact it’s beautiful and amazing here, the rates are extremely low. A proper glass-blowing studio with one station and a medium-sized furnace would cost about C$150,000, and the overhead is very high too, so that’s a huge barrier to entry. But I am well on my way to having my own studio in the next two years or less.
How do you describe your style?