Robert C. Fritz (b. 1920 in Toledo, Ohio; d. April 9, 1986 in Los Angeles, California) was an American ceramics and glass artist and professor at San Jose State University in California. As a major player in America’s mid 20th century studio glass movement, Dr. Robert Fritz is remembered for his contributions to the world of art. Fritz attended San Jose State University from 1950 to 1956, where he was awarded the Bachelor of Art and Master of Art. He received his PhD at Ohio State University.
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- Robert C. Fritz (b. 1920 in Toledo, Ohio; d. April 9, 1986 in Los Angeles, California) was an American ceramics and glass artist and professor at San Jose State University in California. As a major player in America’s mid 20th century studio glass movement, Dr. Robert Fritz is remembered for his contributions to the world of art. Fritz attended San Jose State University from 1950 to 1956, where he was awarded the Bachelor of Art and Master of Art. He received his PhD at Ohio State University. In 1964 Fritz received a scholarship from Harvey Littleton to participate in a four-week glass seminar at the University of Wisconsin. Russell Day was also in attendance; Marvin Lipovsky, a student of Littleton's who later founded a glass program at the University of California, Berkeley, assisted with demonstrations. Shortly before the seminar, Fritz attended the World Congress of Craftsmen, which was held at Columbia University in New York City. There he watched Littleton and his students demonstrate glassblowing on a furnace designed and constructed by Dominick Labino. Fritz also met glass artist Sam Herman at this time. The 1960s studio glass movement was led by Harvey Littleton and Dominic Labino. It was Littleton’s and Labino’s quest to expose the long-held secrets of Murano glass and teach the methods in America where most glass objects had been reduced to mass production. In the mid 1960s Fritz turned his energies to teaching art at San Jose State University where he founded the SJSU glass art department, one of the first colleges in the nation to have such a program. . At the same time he started the California Glass Exchange, along with George Jercich of California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo, CA. The California Glass Exchange is a web-based regional exchange of ideas in glass art. Today’s talented glass art students receive scholarships and honors in Dr. Robert Fritz’s name. Many contemporary artists boast tutelage under Dr. Fritz on their resumes. Glass art created by Fritz during the 1960s to 1980s is marked by his own hand “FRITZ”. His work is remarkable in form and imagination, using difficult techniques approachable only by masters of the art. His glass art masterpieces can be found in the Smithsonian, Renwick Gallery and the private collections of Ted Kennedy, Tom Harkin, Ron Wyden and more throughout the U.S. , Europe, and Japan.
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- Blown glass vase by Dr. Robert Fritz (1960s-1970s)
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- Robert C. Fritz (b. 1920 in Toledo, Ohio; d. April 9, 1986 in Los Angeles, California) was an American ceramics and glass artist and professor at San Jose State University in California. As a major player in America’s mid 20th century studio glass movement, Dr. Robert Fritz is remembered for his contributions to the world of art. Fritz attended San Jose State University from 1950 to 1956, where he was awarded the Bachelor of Art and Master of Art. He received his PhD at Ohio State University.
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