Metro Boomin and Action Bronson are headlining Puffcon in October, and that alone is worth the ticket. But look further down the bill. More than a hundred glass artists will be there, and almost nobody in the art world will say their names out loud.
Puffco announced its lineup for Puffcon Block Party 2026 in late June, and the names at the top are the ones built to travel. Metro Boomin headlines Saturday, October 3. Action Bronson headlines Sunday, October 4. Underneath them sit Curren$y, The Alchemist and Boldy James, OhGeesy, BIA, TiaCorine, Jesse Royal and a dozen more, spread across two days at Los Angeles Center Studios.
That is a genuinely great lineup, and it is the reason most people will buy a ticket. Fair enough. What has our attention is somewhere else on the bill.
Buried further down the announcement, past Smorgasburg and the silent disco and the fifty-plus brand activations, is a line about the Glass Village: more than a hundred glass artists, from around the world, in one place. The roster reads like a phone book from a country that appears on no map. Alex Ubatuba. Cool Hand Suuze. Eternal Flameworks. Dopals Opals. Lissa Melts. Sky the Pyro. Wormhole. Zinalosi.
Those are working artists. Some have been on the torch for twenty years. Their pieces are one-offs, they trade on a secondary market, they appreciate, and collectors chase specific makers the way other collectors chase specific painters. There are dedicated auction sites. There are waiting lists. There are rigs that sell for more than a used car.
And there is not a single major American museum that treats any of it as contemporary art.
Take a heady rig. Sculptural borosilicate, hand-worked, fumed with precious metals, millie work that takes years to learn, unique, signed. Put it on a plinth in Chelsea with a wall text and it is studio glass, a category the American art establishment has been comfortable with since Dale Chihuly made it respectable.
Now drill a joint into it and add a carb cap. Same maker, same skill, same hours, same glass. It is drug paraphernalia now, and the museums will not touch it.
That is the whole line. Function. It is not a judgment about craft, because the craft is not in dispute. The people who make this work can do things with color and heat that most gallery glassblowers cannot. The judgment is about the hole.
So the market built itself somewhere else. It runs on Instagram drops, on show floors, on private sales and on a handful of specialist auction sites. No gallery representation to speak of, no institutional criticism, no acquisition committees. What there is instead is Puffcon, and a few other rooms like it, once a year.
Puffcon started as a meetup for people who bought a Peak. It is now in its sixth year, and its glass programming is arguably the largest annual gathering of functional glass artists anywhere on earth.
“Everything about Puffcon starts with the community,” Puffco CEO Roger Volodarsky said in announcing the lineup. “It’s become a place where artists, creators, chefs, glassmakers, musicians, and cannabis enthusiasts come together to celebrate the creativity and culture that continue to shape this industry and the broader cultural landscape.”
He is describing a festival. He is also describing, whether he meant to or not, the closest thing this discipline has to a biennial. When the only place a body of work gets shown at scale is an event thrown by the company that sells the devices the work is built around, that is not a scene with an institution. That is a scene with a landlord.
You can see the shape of it in the ticketing. Saturday passes, two-day passes and VIP are sold only to people who own a Puffco Peak Pro, Peak, Proxy or Pivot. Sunday is open to anyone. Nobody in glass is complaining, and there is no reason they should, because Puffco showed up when nobody else did. It is still worth noticing that the largest exhibition of functional glass in the world has a hardware requirement at the door.
One more line from the release, in a city sitting inside the biggest legal cannabis market on the planet: there will be no cannabis sales on site.
Metro Boomin will get the headlines, and he has earned them. He is diamond-certified and he will fill the lot. But in October, in a studio in downtown Los Angeles, a hundred-odd people who are very good at something the culture refuses to name will set up tables and sell work a museum would take in a heartbeat if it were shaped like a vase.
Puffcon Block Party 2026 runs October 3 and 4 at Los Angeles Center Studios. Twenty-one and up.
<p>The post Metro Boomin Is Headlining Puffcon. The Hundred Glass Artists Under Him Are the Real Story. first appeared on High Times.</p>
The industry’s attention still gravitates toward the legacy states. But through operators like SWADE Cannabis…
Mary Jane Berlin brought tens of thousands of people into one building and reminded them…
Sacha Baron Cohen has reportedly been filming a new Ali G movie in secret. Could…
Big news for wellness enthusiasts: Canna River, the family-run brand that’s spent years earning trust…
Let's start with the headline nobody in Washington wants to print: marijuana is still illegal.…
A rolling reserve on a high-risk account holds 5% to 10% of every sale for…