Glass act: Jeremy Maxwell Wintrebert’s cutting-edge work

The artist explains his turbulent relationship with his medium, which has a power that is as treacherous as it is transcendental

Jeremy Maxwell Wintrebert's Dark Matter vase
Dark Matter vase
(Image credit: Jeremy Josselin)

I have a distinct memory of finger-painting with my mum when I was five – it was the first time I’d created something. I can still smell the paint and feel it on my fingers. As I grew up – I was born in Paris but grew up in West Africa – I became obsessed with materials, and expressing myself.

I continued using paint until I was 18, but also worked with wood, ceramics, matches… whatever I could get my hands on. I graduated from high school and had to find that material, and when I saw glass, it was obvious. It was hot and dripping and glowing: there was a magic to it.

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