THE ARTIST

SiOx Limited is a business that sells handcrafted art glass. The SiOx studio is in Rochester, NY and holds an assortment of individually handcrafted items, including plates, different size bowls, vases, lamps, tables and one-of-a-kind works of art. In the sunlight, the art glass glimmers on the shelves. In the other room artist Ronald Frear works on his creations, carefully making each piece.

Frear prefers to be called a craftsman and says he gets his ideas from around town. “Mainly they are things I see around here,” he said, pointing out the wildflowers on some of his glassware. “A lot of these flowers are back by Larkins Creek where I live.

For Frear, his new career was an eventual progression into his family’s love of art. A construction worker for years, Frear never seemed to share the love of art that his mother and sisters enjoyed. But one day, he saw a Rochester resident’s glassware creations, and became interested in the process.

Armed with limited supplies but a willingness to create, he began handcrafting glassware in 1987. “It was just trial and error. At that time there were no books on it,” Frear explained. He used the basement of his parents’ house and started with a small kiln. His mother, an artist herself, was a great support.

Striving to be as original as the handcrafted glass he made Frear sought the help of his sister Lorrie, an accomplished artist herself, in naming the business. After much creative brainstorming and a little sibling rivalry they named the business SiOx Glass Ltd. SiOx is a combination of the components that make up glass.

You can find Ron Frear at many of the popular arts festivals in the Northeast such as Corn Hill and Clothesline Arts festivals in Rochester, the Allentown Arts Festival in Buffalo, NY and the Patriot News Festival in Harrisburg, PA. He enjoys meeting the people who buy his work and getting new ideas from conversations with them.

Leaving behind his former career, Frear became a full-time art glass craftsman in 2000. He says he enjoys running his own business, and the hours allow him time to spend with his wife and children.

“I guess art runs in the family,” said Frear, who admits he was never that interested in art until he got involved in handcrafting glassware. “You kind of fall into it.”
You can see his talent in each piece of glassware he creates.

©2003 Ronald C. Frear • 100 Boxart St, Rochester, New York 14612 • Tel 585.663.6630
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