Growing up in Toledo, the birthplace of America’s 1960s studio-glass movement, John Hogan started making small bowls and paperweights at the tender age of 15. “I’ve always tried to break away from preconceived ideas about glass,” says Hogan, who, in his 20s, followed in the footsteps of his predecessors—letting functionality fall by the wayside to experiment with shapes, textures, and colors. Now based in Seattle, Hogan has since translated such tests into fully realized furnishings, among them lustrous shades for light fixtures, a cocktail table with a base of mirrored blown orbs, and an ethereal cast chair. Along the way, he’s begun to consider glass at an architectural scale, developing prototypes for screens, walls, façades, and even load-bearing systems, in the case of the interlocking blocks he made with MOS…