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Islero: Scrapyard Abstract No. 7, 2006. recycled steel. 22" x 24" x 9" |
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Purchase Islero for $1030 ($950 plus $80 S+H). |
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When I made this piece, I saw it as an animal running at full tilt, turning sharply mid-run on two legs. I love the way the tail whips around through the air and the head stretches outward, still thrust in the original direction. Others have looked and seen the head of a bull, so I named it Islero, after the bull that ended the life of Manolete, the world's most famous bullfighter. I'd thought that since bullfighting is such an obsessive sport, there might be names for such sudden turns as this creature is engaged in, but the choreographic lexicon of bullfighting seems to concern itself only with the moves of the matador and not the bull. On the other hand, the historical Islero must have made just such a sudden sharp and unexpected turn, so the name seems appropriate and references both images well. |
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Houses and Weather: Scrapyard Abstract No. 8, 2006. recycled steel. 14" x 10" x 3" |
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Purchase Houses and Weather for $550 ($500 plus $50 S+H). |
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Although the steel in this sculpture was crushed, compacted and sheared intentionally, by a machine at the junk yard, it reminds me of what you see when heavy weather tears through a trailer park. The jagged piece in the center resembles lightning or a twister, hence the name Houses and Weather. I lost a building to the snow a couple years ago— I was on the roof shoveling madly when it just dropped out from under me, so I know a bit about what weather can do. If I could, I'd get a restraining order to keep the weather off my couple acres here. Much as the beautiful colors of fall have always made it my favorite season, there's a part of me that starts to panic now every year when the weather starts to chill… I do take it personally, and I look at the sky as an implacable threat. Sigh. I'll get over it, eventually. But in the meantime, that's what I see in this sculpture. |
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Between the Flames: Small Tabletop Sculptures 2006. Recycled steel. dimensions variable |
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The sculptures below are made from shapes left over when I cut the flames for the Great Bowl O Fire. They're the spaces between the flames. Although they look simple, it's a bit deceptive. Almost all the shapes look cool by themselves, and they look really interesting when they're just piled up on the ground… but the minute you start trying to get them to work together in small numbers it becomes difficult. I've thrown out more than a few sculptures that started with promise but just didn't gel. It requires a delicate balance of formal elegance and chance to get these to work. Essentially, the goal is to preserve the raw fact of the bits while harmonizing them on another level. I guess the best way to explain it might be to say that it's much easier to do a successful abstract by creating all the parts from scratch… when you're working with existing shapes, you're given much less control over how they fit together. This makes working with these pieces both more frustrating and more interesting. And although they take too long to be a productive use of my time, I imagine I'll keep working on more as an exercise for my eye and mind. Plus, I really like to use my own scrap as much as the material I buy at the scrap yard… I could trade it in by the pound for other steel, but it's nice to be able to actually make something from it instead. |
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| Between the Flames No. 1, 2006. Recycled steel. 13" x 11" x 5.5" |
Between the Flames No. 1, 2006. Recycled steel. 13" x 11" x 5.5" |
Between the Flames No. 2, 2006. Recycled steel. 9.5" x 9" x 4" |
Between the Flames No. 2, 2006. Recycled steel. 9.5" x 9" x 4" |
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| Buy Between the Flames No. 1
for $175 ($150 plus $25 S+H). |
Buy Between the Flames No. 2
for $175 ($150 plus $25 S+H). |
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click thumbnail to view larger image.
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Curious Child, 2002 Granite, Steel. 36" H x 34" W x 8" D |
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Purchase Curious Child for $600 ($500 plus $100 Fed Ex Freight). |
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This was the first of my sculptures in stone and steel. I like to pose him in the yard as though he is feeding the Big Horse Pulltoy sculpture. They make a nice pair. |
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Little Miss Exuberance, 2003 Steel, Granite, Copper. 74" H x 27" W x 12" D |
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Purchase Little Miss Exuberance for $1,600 ($1,200 plus $400 Fed Ex Freight). |
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Of all the sculptures I've done in stone and steel, this is my favorite. I love that thrust hip and the overall saucy pose of this piece! In fact, I totally can't imagine how anyone could fail to fall in love with this sculpture! The torso is a piece of scrap granite left over from a custom counter top, the head is copper and the rest is recycled steel. |
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Statement + Bio | Curriculum Vitae | Bibliography
I'm best known as an artist and designer. Relaxing makes me tense, so I tend to put in a lot of hours on diverse projects.
On the way to a successful art career I've been a poet and writer, a tech geek, a print and web designer, illustrator, industrial designer, musician, teacher, actor, set designer and even a paid guru once.
It's all the same thing in the end— I wake up most days thinking about how I want to change, fix or improve some aspect of the world. And after a couple cups of coffee I get started on it.
My specialty is impossibility remediation: if it can't be done, I'm on it.
To make it easier to find what you're looking for, this site is divided into 4 sections.
Click tabs above to restrict search to a section, or search all four below.
How will it look in your home? Visit the flickr page of customer photos or submit your own photos here.