Robert Kehlmann
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Robert Kehlmann is an artist and writer. He was an early spokesperson for evaluating glass art in the context of contemporary painting and sculpture. His glasswork has been exhibited worldwide and is the focus of numerous commentaries. Kehlmann's work can be found in museums and private collections in the United States, Europe and Asia. He has written books, articles, and exhibition reviews for publications in the U.S. and abroad. In 2014 th
Rakow Research Library of The Corning Museum of Glass
acquired Kehlmann's studio and research archives. In 2025 he published a debut novel, “The Rabbi’s Suitcase.”


Biography

Part of a group of California artists making leaded glass panels in the early 1970s, Kehlmann emerged as a key figure in the development of contemporary American stained glass.Susanne K. Frantz, ''New Glass Review 18'', The Corning Museum of Glass, 1997, pp.34-35. Formally trained in literary criticism he was self-taught as an artist. His leaded works, called “Compositions,” together with later mixed media pieces and
mosaics A mosaic () is a pattern or image made of small regular or irregular pieces of colored stone, glass or ceramic, held in place by plaster/Mortar (masonry), mortar, and covering a surface. Mosaics are often used as floor and wall decoration, and ...
, have been described as symbolic, subjective narratives, rendered in a “painterly tradition.” As an art critic he was a theorist and spokesperson for the contemporary glass movement in the later part of the 20th century. Kehlmann received
National Endowment for the Arts The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) is an independent agency of the United States federal government that offers support and funding for projects exhibiting artistic excellence. It was created in 1965 as an independent agency of the feder ...
fellowships for his work as both an artist and critic. He has written two books about glass, and articles and exhibition reviews by him have appeared in periodicals in the U.S. and abroad. Kehlmann has taught at the
Pilchuck Glass School Pilchuck Glass School is an international center for glass art education. The school was founded in 1971 by Dale Chihuly, Ruth Tamura, Anne Gould Hauberg (1917-2016), and John H. Hauberg (1916-2002). The campus is located on a former tree farm in ...
, the
California College of the Arts The California College of the Arts (CCA) is a private art school in San Francisco, California. It was founded in Berkeley, California in 1907 and moved to a historic estate in Oakland, California in 1922. In 1996, it opened a second campus in ...
, and the Miasa Bunka Center in Nagano City, Japan. He has lectured and given workshops at many institutions including the
Renwick Gallery The Renwick Gallery is a branch of the Smithsonian American Art Museum located in Washington, D.C. that displays American craft and decorative arts from the 19th to 21st century. The gallery is housed in a National Historic Landmark building that ...
, the
Corning Museum of Glass The Corning Museum of Glass is a museum in Corning (city), New York, Corning, New York, United States, dedicated to the art, history, and science of glass. It was founded in 1951 by Corning Incorporated, Corning Glass Works and currently has a ...
, the
Victoria and Albert Museum The Victoria and Albert Museum (abbreviated V&A) in London is the world's largest museum of applied arts, decorative arts and design, housing a permanent collection of over 2.8 million objects. It was founded in 1852 and named after Queen ...
, the
Honolulu Academy of Arts The Honolulu Museum of Art (formerly the Honolulu Academy of Arts) is an art museum in Honolulu, Hawaii. The museum is the largest of its kind in the state, and was founded in 1922 by Anna Rice Cooke. It has one of the largest single collectio ...
and the
Rhode Island School of Design The Rhode Island School of Design (RISD , pronounced "Riz-D") is a private art and design school in Providence, Rhode Island. The school was founded as a coeducational institution in 1877 by Helen Adelia Rowe Metcalf, who sought to increase th ...
. Kehlmann has juried and curated numerous exhibitions including a retrospective of work by Czech sculptors
Stanislav Libenský and Jaroslava Brychtová Stanislav Libenský (27 March 1921 – 24 February 2002) and Jaroslava Brychtová (18 July 1924 – 8 April 2020) were Czech contemporary artists. Their works are included in many major modern art collections, such as the Metropolitan Museum of ...
. He has served on the board of directors of th
Glass Art Society
(1980–84, 1989–92) and edited th

(1981-1984). A former Chairman of Berkeley'
Landmark’s Preservation Commission
(1997-1999), he founded the
Berkeley Historical Plaque Project The Berkeley Historical Plaque Project, founded in 1997, is a Berkeley, California non-profit 501 (c)(3) organization whose mission is to document Berkeley’s history through plaques identifying locations of historical import.The Berkeley Histor ...
in 1997. His debut novel, ''The Rabbi’s Suitcase'', was published in 2025. A 1,000 page early draft together with his notes and research materials for the novel, are housed in the archives of the YIVO Institute of Jewish Research in New York. Kehlmann has lived and worked in Berkeley California since 1963. His wife, Diana Tosto Kehlmann, is
Jin Shin Jitsu
practitioner and a homeopath. Their son, Ephraim, is a digital media producer living in New York City.


Leaded Glass Drawings

After receiving his master's degree in English Literature, Kehlmann traveled in Europe (1969–70) where he developed an interest in art. He used the tools of literary criticism to help his understanding: “From the start I felt there was little difference in the experience of reading a poem and that of looking at a painting.” Kehlmann's early “Compositions” are made with traditional lead
came A came is a divider bar used between small pieces of glass to make a larger glazing panel. There are two kinds of came: the H-shaped sections that hold two pieces together and the U-shaped sections that are used for the borders. Cames are mostl ...
and colored glass. Glass forms protrude from the background surface, whimsically frolicking with and redefining underlying blocks of color and lead scribbles.Cate Gable, “In Pursuit of Light: The Zen Graffiti of Robert Kehlmann,” ''American Craft'', April/May 1993. Explaining the absence of transparent glass in these works, he wrote: “I don’t want people looking ''through'' my windows. What lies behind the compositions, aside from a source of light, has no relevance to my design.” Kehlmann rejected the medium's seductive colors and Tiffany-like approach “plagued” by “small multi-colored pieces of glass,” insisting that the artist has “greater control” with fewer colors and fewer pieces of glass. His leaded “Compositions” are more akin to paintings or drawings than to traditional stained glass. They have been described as narratives at once “spontaneous, lyric, grotesque and humorous.” Biomorphic forms, quirky lines and childlike scribbles, at times derived from his son's crayon drawings, add to the surreal atmosphere. A crossed-out triangle in one of the works “appears a casual enough gesture, but the assumption of nearly a thousand years of stained glass, that the nature of line is to delineate shape, is challenged by that childlike scrawl.” These Compositions “quietly demolished more than a few of the restrictive preconceptions surrounding his media.”


Sandblasted works

In the late ‘70s Kehlmann began using sandblast on sheets of hand-blown glass to make “nuanced monochromes”Janet Koplos, “Moraga, Calif.: Robert Kehlmann at the Hearst Art Gallery,” ''Art in America'', Sept. 1996, p.117. which glow with inner-light trapped in their surfaces. Perhaps in response to his brother's untimely death in 1982, the exuberance of the early leaded compositions gives way to introspection in two major series: ''Tablets'' (1981) and ''The Stations of the Cross'' (1982-1995). In the mid-1980s Kehlmann began using brass and copper etching on the surface of the glass, and charcoal drawings on board behind the glass, to express “free-associative states of mind.” During a 1984 interview, the late art critic Clement Greenberg singled out Kehlmann's work as taking the “first steps” toward “major art” in “two-dimensional, pictorial” glass. Kehlmann's mid-career sandblasted works encourage the viewer to enter the depth of the works together with the light.Marvin A. Schenck, “Curator’s Statement,” in ''Robert Kehlmann: Painting with Glass, A Retrospective'', (1996) Hearst Art Gallery, Saint Mary’s College of California, Moraga, p.7. Within layered pieces of glass, or spaces between the glass and underlying drawing, lines and shadows mix with light. The inner-spaces create changing kinetic pattern and movement as the viewer moves or the light changes. After traveling in Japan and teaching at the Miasa Bunka center in Nagano City Japan in 1985, the influence of Japanese esthetics and calligraphy emerges prominently in Kehlmann's work. His pieces of the 1990s and beyond have been called “quiet abstract meditations” making references to the Bible, Buddhism, the natural landscape and Japanese calligraphy. Kehlmann's “Zen graffiti or Americanized calligraphy,” a mix of bold charcoal gestures and anxious strokes, at times combines with broad areas of gold leaf in the style of the Japanese
byōbu are Japanese folding screens made from several joined panels, bearing decorative painting and calligraphy, used to separate interiors and enclose private spaces, among other uses. History are originated in Han dynasty China and are tho ...
. Other works of the ‘90s were inspired by the northern California coast with light from ripples and bubbles in the hand-blown glass evoking the surface of water, tide pools, and underwater shadows. They are “characterized by the sensual, measured quality of tender, vulnerable drawn lines in an uncertain planar space.”


Mosaic and Collage

In his mosaics, as in the sandblasted works, Kehlmann superimposes glass over an underlying drawing. Irregular spaces between individually hand-cut
tesserae A tessera (plural: tesserae, diminutive ''tessella'') is an individual tile, usually formed in the shape of a square, used in creating a mosaic. It is also known as an abaciscus or abaculus. Historical tesserae In early antiquity, mo ...
and larger abstract glass forms assume a graphic role. They cast shadows that lead the eye of the viewer back and forth between the glass surface and the drawing behind it. The expressive mixed-media collages, containing autobiographical snippets (museum and opera ticket stubs, entries from his father's address cards, fragments of notated travel maps, etc.) are his most personal works.


Select Public Collections

* Bank of America World Headquarters, San Francisco, California *
Corning Museum of Glass The Corning Museum of Glass is a museum in Corning (city), New York, Corning, New York, United States, dedicated to the art, history, and science of glass. It was founded in 1951 by Corning Incorporated, Corning Glass Works and currently has a ...
, Corning, New York * Four Seasons Hotel, San Francisco, CA * Glass Museum, Centro de Arte Vitro, Monterrey, Mexico * Hessisches Landesmuseum, Darmstadt, Germany *
Hokkaido Museum of Modern Art The opened in Sapporo, Hokkaidō is the second-largest island of Japan and comprises the largest and northernmost prefecture, making up its own region. The Tsugaru Strait separates Hokkaidō from Honshu; the two islands are connected by ...
, Sapporo, Japan *
Huntington Museum of Art The Huntington Museum of Art is a nationally accredited art museum located in the Park Hills neighborhood above Ritter Park in Huntington, West Virginia. Housed on over 50 acres of land and occupying almost 60,000 square feet, it is the largest ...
, Huntington, West Virginia * International Alcorcon Museo dei Vidreo, Madrid, Spain * International Glass Museum, Ebeltoft, Denmark * Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum, Wausau, Wisconsin * Lincoln Square Residential Lobby (111 W. 67th St.), New York City * Musée des Arts Décoratifs de la Ville de Lausanne, Switzerland * Museum für Zeitgenössische Glasmalerei, Langen, Germany * Museum of Arts and Design, New York *
Oakland Museum Oakland is a city in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area in the U.S. state of California. It is the county seat and most populous city in Alameda County, with a population of 440,646 in 2020. A major West Coast port, Oakland is ...
, Oakland CA * Pilchuck School, Stanwood, Washington * Saint Mary's College, Moraga, CA *
Smithsonian American Art Museum The Smithsonian American Art Museum (SAAM; formerly the National Museum of American Art) is a museum in Washington, D.C., part of the Smithsonian Institution. Together with its branch museum, the Renwick Gallery, SAAM holds one of the world's lar ...
, Washington, D.C. * Süssmuth-Mitarbeiter-Stiftung Glas-Museum, Immenhausen, Germany *
Toledo Museum of Art The Toledo Museum of Art is an internationally known art museum located in the Old West End neighborhood of Toledo, Ohio. It houses a collection of more than 30,000 objects. With 45 galleries, it covers 280,000 square feet and is currently in th ...
, Toledo, Ohio


Notable exhibitions

* 1976: “Robert Kehlmann: Stained Glass Compositions,” Richmond Art Center, Richmond CA. * 1978: “New Stained Glass,” Museum of Contemporary Crafts, New York (catalog). * 1978: “Robert Kehlmann: Lead and Glass Drawings,” William Sawyer Gallery, San Francisco, CA. * 1979: “New Glass,” Corning Museum of Glass, Corning, NY (catalog). * 1982: “Robert Kehlmann: Works on Glass,” William Sawyer Gallery, San Francisco, CA. * 1982: “World Glass Now ’82,” Hokkaido Museum of Modern Art, Sapporo, Japan (catalog) * 1983: “Sculptural Glass,” Tucson Museum of Art, Tucson, Arizona. “Stations of the Cross” a series of fourteen sandblasted glass panels exhibited (catalog). * 1985: “Robert Kehlmann, Neue Glasmalerei,” Galerie M, Kassel and Galerie L, Hamburg, Germany. * 1986: “Robert Kehlmann: New Works with Glass,” William Sawyer Gallery, San Francisco, CA. * 1988, 1990: “Robert Kehlmann,” Anne O’Brien Gallery, Washington, DC. * 1993: “Robert Kehlmann: Drawings with Glass,” Dorothy Weiss Gallery, San Francisco, CA. * 1996: “Robert Kehlmann, Painting with Glass: A Retrospective,” Hearst Art Gallery, Saint Mary's College of California, Moraga, CA. (catalog).


Art Criticism

As author and curator, Kehlmann became the unofficial theoretician for innovative, non-traditional work in stained glass. He praised American artists who were forging technical and esthetic innovation while exploring glass as an “autonomous” (as distinct from architectural) medium. A friendly rivalry developed with Robert Sowers, the dean of American stained glass criticism, who argued that stained glass, from its origins, was first and foremost an architectural art. With articles like “Stained Glass as a Non-Architectural Art,” and “Glass as a Free Art Form,” Kehlmann questioned this assumption. He focused attention on non-architectural stained glass being done by artists like himself who designed and fabricated independent panels during the 1970s and 1980s: Sanford Barnett, Casey Lewis,
Paul Marioni Paul Marioni (b. 1941 Cincinnati, Ohio) is an American artist who works in the medium of glass. Biography Marioni graduated from the University of Cincinnati in 1967 with a degree in philosophy. He became a filmmaker, then started working with g ...
, Peter Mollica, Richard Posner and Narcissus Quagliata. In later writings Kehlmann follows in the footsteps of artist-critic Robert Sowers by developing a new contemporary stained glass aesthetic. ''Twentieth Century Stained Glass: a New Definition'' presents an overview of the medium focusing on different 20th Century trends, how they influenced one another, and how they were influenced by other media. ''The Inner Light: Sculpture by Stanislav Libenský and Jaroslava Brychtová'', a monograph published in conjunction with the 2002 inaugural exhibition of Tacoma's
Museum of Glass The Museum of Glass (MOG) is a contemporary art museum in Tacoma, Washington, dedicated to the medium of glass. Since its founding in 2002, the Museum of Glass has been committed to creating a space for the celebration of the studio glass movem ...
, analyzes the artists’ work in the context of
Czech Cubism Czech Cubism (referred to more generally as Cubo-Expressionism) was an avant-garde art movement of Czech proponents of Cubism, active mostly in Prague from 1912 to 1914. Prague was perhaps the most important center for Cubism outside Paris before ...
. Kehlmann's interviews with the artists, which took place shortly before Libenský's death, movingly refer to works cast at the time the artist discovered he had terminal cancer. As editor of the ''Glass Art Society Journal'', in 1981 Kehlmann founded a well-respected critical and technical journal that continues in publication.


Writer

Kehlmann wrote a debut novel, “The Rabbi’s Suitcase,” after finding a trove of love letters written to his mother in her youth by
Reuven Barkat Reuven Barkat (; 25 October 1906 – 5 April 1972) was an Israeli politician who served as a member of the Knesset for the Alignment and the Labor Party from 1965 until his death in 1972. Biography Born Reuven Borstein in Tauragė in the Kovno ...
, a man who later in life, as an ally of
David Ben-Gurion David Ben-Gurion ( ; ; born David Grün; 16 October 1886 – 1 December 1973) was the primary List of national founders, national founder and first Prime Minister of Israel, prime minister of the State of Israel. As head of the Jewish Agency ...
, was a key figure in the founding of the Israeli state.  Published in 2025, the novel vividly recreates his family’s 50-year migration odyssey from Lithuania, to Mandatory Palestine, to Depression Era America, with a focus on his mother’s youthful romance.


Gallery


References


External links


Robert Kehlmann Collection
Rakow Research Library, The Corning Museum of Glass, Corning, NY. (Retrieved 24 January 2019) {{DEFAULTSORT:Kehlmann, Robert American stained glass artists and manufacturers American mixed-media artists Artists from California American contemporary artists 1942 births Antioch College alumni University of California, Berkeley alumni Artists from Brooklyn Writers from Brooklyn Living people American male writers