Born: Honolulu, Hawaii 1960
Education: University of Hawaii B.S. Architecture, minor Fine Art
Michael Michael Mortara was first introduced to glass blowing as a student in high school
and has been working with that medium for over 24 years. In 1980, he joined the glass blowing department at Punahou School
as a technical assistant while completing a degree in Architecture from the University of Hawaii.
Several years ago, he began a shift away from his architectural and construction endeavors
to focus more time on his work in glass.
In the summer of 1998, he began the construction of his new glass studio on the upper slopes of Kilauea volcano
on the island of Hawaii. As a full time glass artist, he and his wife, glass artist Misato Mochizuki Mortara, divide their
time between the production of their limited edition vessel series and one of a kind sculptural pieces. His glass is in private
collections through out the US and Europe, and has been included in the permanent collection of Hawaii State Foundation of
Art, and The Contemporary Museum of Art, Honolulu.
"There is something both dramatic and dynamic about the manipulation
of a molten mass of glass, such that the process has almost as much appeal for me as does the product. Hot glass is a medium
in constant motion, where balance, timing and rhythm are the essential tools in the process. Once you start, you can’t
stop until it’s done, and after more than twenty years in glass, I’ve conceded that it is the glass that is really
in control, as much as I would like to think other wise. My
work is successful if the people whose lives it becomes a part of derives some satisfaction from it’s beauty and a sense
of mystery as to how it evolved."
- Michael
Mortara, 2002