OurBrownCounty 19Sept-Oct | Page 37

9 to 18, and she was working as a service manager at an auto dealership.
“ It was very stressful,” she said, working 60 hours a week and raising a family. To lower the stress levels, she moved to an animal sanctuary farm near Willisburg, Kentucky, where she lived in a yurt off-grid for awhile, taking care of about 180 animals. She then found herself in Madison, Wisconsin, working as a baker at the second-oldest business cooperative in the U. S., Nature’ s Baker.
Finally, she found an affordable house in Battle Ground, put lots of work into it, and met Kathleen Kitch of Williamsport, Indiana, who introduced her to fused glass. Shortly thereafter, she started making fused glass on the side, while working, as a receptionist, doing house cleaning, and in retail settings.
Fused glass is a process of joining pieces of glass together at high temperatures, usually in a kiln( B has five). Cut or whole pieces of clear and colored glass can be arranged before firing, turning multiple units of glass into one.
As a 60 th birthday present to herself five years ago, she became a self-sustaining glass artist.
Now the next phase of her journey begins as she settles into a rural home and studio on Scarce O’ Fat Ridge in western Brown County.
“ Heaven sent” is how she describes the 10 acres she is transforming into a home and workspace. She has been looking for about two years in Owen, Lawrence, Green, Brown, and Monroe counties, to be closer to friends and family and market her work.
“ There’ s lots of support for artists in Brown County,” she said,“ something I was not finding up north.”
Like many of the artists here, B finds her inspiration in nature, and she is self-taught, learning by doing.
“ I’ m a part of nature and it’ s a part of me,” she said. Though best known for the hanging glass nature panels she has been making for about nine years, she plans to begin working on glass and metal sculptures that belong in the woods.
“ I want to make things that the moss would like to grow on and animals would like to nest in and hunt in,” she said. She sees art as a part of the permaculture, an exchange of energy between people, places, and things.
Her art is available in several retail outlets, including New Leaf in Nashville, and at various arts and crafts shows. She will be a guest artist at Homestead Weaving Studio during the Back Roads of Brown County, a self-guided tour of studios in rural Brown County, which runs the entire month of October.
“ When people walk into my booth at shows, they start smiling,” she said.“ It’ s a really powerful thing. I like knowing what I make is having a positive impact. We can all use a little smile,” she said.
B’ s website is < warmglasswonder. com >.•

Back Roads of

BROWN COUNTY

STUDIO TOUR

Month of October

The Back Roads of Brown County Studio Tour will feature 28 artists and 19 studios this year.

The 21 st annual tour is a free, selfguided tour of artists’ studios for the entire month of October. Individual studio hours may vary. The tour will include many favorites who have participated in the past years, as well as new studio of stained glass artist DeMaris Gaunt and new guest artists pastelist Lory Winford, photographer Dorothyann Strange, and woodworker Pete Baxter.
Free maps are available at the Brown County Convention and Visitors Bureau in Nashville, the T. C. Steele State Historic Site, the businesses of 17 tour sponsors, the artists’ studios, and online at < browncountystudiotour. com > and on Facebook. Brief bios of the artists and a video of the tour can be seen at the tour’ s website. •
Sept./ Oct. 2019 • Our Brown County 37