Danielle “Dani” Kaes loves neon. Glass tubes, bent into the shapes of letters and objects and filled with glowing gas, have fascinated her since she was a kid. “Neon’s attractive—it’s all about attracting attention, right?” she says. “That’s why it’s so great for advertisements. I was always really, really drawn to it, as a function of light.”
Today, Kaes is a full-time neon tube bender—she applies fire and skill to make shapes and letters. Using colored glass tubes with phosphorescent coating activated by UV light for different colors, she fills the tubes with a range of gases—neon, of course, but also argon, helium, xenon, and mercury vapor. Then she hooks the tubes up to electricity to make the magic happen. Her day job is at National Sign, a major Seattle sign shop.
“Women have long played an important but little-known role in neon sign shops. A key example is Betty Willis, who designed the Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas sign, and Bea Haverfield, who designed many Seattle icons,” says Corrie Siegel, executive director of the Museum of Neon Art in Glendale, California. Yet it’s hard for anyone to come by an apprenticeship at a traditionally male-dominated sign shop, which is where tube benders have historically gained and shared skills.
So it’s exciting that a new generation of contemporary neon artists—many of them female-identified or gender-nonconforming—are learning and teaching outside the shop. Despite her day job, Kaes—also an artist and educator—is one of them. She’s currently collaborating with Tacoma, Washington–based glass artist Jacob Willcox on a venture called Bad Boy, a combination neon shop and bending school. The pair have also been teaching away from home, including stints at the Pittsburgh Glass Center and the renowned Pilchuck Glass School in Stanwood, Washington. The point, says Kaes, is to make skills that were once the monopoly of the sign industry available to anyone who’s as excited about neon as she is.
Neon Glows, Fades, Lights Up Again
Neon has been around a long time. Building on more than a century of previous experiments with electrified gases in tubes, Georges Claude established the Claude Neon Lights company in Paris just after World War I, patenting the technology that inventors like Heinrich Geissler, Daniel McFarland Moore, and Nikola Tesla innovated. Claude franchisees began spreading the signage around the world. From New York to Shanghai, a glowing, pulsating neon cityscape became a prime marker of modernity.
But in the US, World War II blackouts on both coasts meant that neon was switched off. And when you switch neon back on after it’s been off for a while, illumination can fail or falter, making signs flicker and lose elements. This degradation of neon contributed to a new image of the medium—as a garish come-on to cheap bars and seedy hotels. Cities began turning away from neon, and when the highway beautification movement kicked off in the 1960s, thousands of roadway signs were consigned to junkyards. By the 1990s, neon was being rapidly replaced by LED and neon shops were closing.
As the rejection of Georges Claude’s legacy went into high gear in the ’60s, though, artists began discovering neon. Conceptualists like Joseph Kosuth and neo-Dada artists such as Keith Sonnier brought this “degraded” medium into the white-walled precincts of art, inspiring later artists such as the Young British Artists star Tracey Emin to follow suit.
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Dani Kaes is a Seattle-based neon artist who works full time at a neon sign shop.