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"Mezhirich Totems," welded steel.
Just as a writer utilizes language to describe any given idea or
topic, so I use my medium to address things I find of interest.
One is perhaps given more freedom in the mode of expression I have
chosen to use, since it is abstract and the rules of its use are
not as rigid. I feel freer with the language of sculpture, drawing
on contemporary and past artistic vernacular, and if possible, bringing
into use my own invented colloquialism, than I would with say the
English language. A working knowledge of the material with its inherent
strengths and limitations is crucial to the development of a coherent
and cohesive execution of intention. The structural integrity of
steel is elemental to my ability to convey motion and energy through
my sculptures. Blacksmithing, working the steel with forge, anvil,
and hammer, allows me to impart more of my own hand to the piece
thereby personalizing the work more thoroughly. The acquisition
of new tools, materials, and techniques expand my ability to communicate
more creatively within the sculptural language. By turning the steel
to a malleable state where it is easily shaped and bent a greater
freedom is achieved; a freedom to invent shapes which characterize
rhythms, unlikely structural elements, and in some cases a more
capricious nature. An early interest in the natural world and figurative
art-making finds its way almost unconsciously into my work, revealing
objects whose origins may be organic or anthropomorphic. Twisting
lines and knotted bars with their misshapen or sharpened ends at
times evoke visceral, bone-like, or muscular impressions while alternately
resembling the flight of birds or the contorted growth of plant-life.
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