I started this as part of what I was writing about the metal items my grandfather made, but I discovered I had more to say about metal today than I'd thought, so it grew into its own entry.
As a child, at some point when I realized the significance of "Granddad made these", I decided that I wanted to learn how to do sand casting. I don't think it was the beautiful silver candlesticks we used for holiday meals that got my attention -- the geometric shapes didn't register somehow as art, despite their elegant beauty -- so it was probably the fly, a cast iron housefly with wings that lifted up, which I thought was an odd covered ashtray until someone eventually explained it was supposed to be a doorknocker, which made such a great fidget-toy for all of us kids (in its usual spot on an end-table) when we went to visit our grandparents ... it was probably that fly that made me realize such things don't just come from museums and stores and catalogs, but that my granddad made this ... nifty thing.
So I wanted to learn to make nifty-things. And I wanted him to teach me. But I never got around to trying to assemble the tools and materials and coax him to show me. Someday, I'm sure, I'll learn on my own, and I'll be proud of that, and I'll feel a connection to him as a result of it, but it would've been a very powerful thing to have learned it from him. (It also would've been significant to perform with my father, but I was never able to convince him to pick up the trombone again after I'd gotten good enough on guitar to daydream of such an event. But maybe, just maybe, someday I'll get to share a stage with my brother.)
And I have learned to make some kinds of niftythings, including some in metal, despite frequent repetition of the "you have no artistic talent", "you have no appreciation for beauty", and "you can't be an artist because you're a scientist" messages that I got along the way. So far what I do in metal is to carve it. To cut it, drill it, occasionally solder it, sometimes etch it, but largely to carve it (with the aid of motorized tools). And I feel that I have not yet explored all of the carving-brass concept that I want to, so I'm not tired of that or finished with it ... but holding this small brass crocodile reminds me that despite my interest in carving metal, sooner or later I should get around to that old interest in casting it, as well.
I've been interested in carving stone and wood, as well, but haven't felt comfortable attempting those for some reason. I did try whittling in middle school (back when one could carry a hunting knife to school -- and innocently!), but never felt like I could make the knife or the wood do quite what I wanted. And stone, well stone just kind of scares me. A slip, and a chunk of stone that I was going to need falls off. I'll need to get past my fear of stone and try my hand at it one day anyhow. But there's something ... something special, something comforting, something, solid in a different way than stone is solid, about metal. I'm drawn to it. (I like chains better than rope for bondage, too, for similar reasons -- rope is more comfortable and easier to work with, but chain has all that sound and psychology of the metal working for it.) So I etch, and I engrave, and I cut, and I solder (not as well as I'd like, but I manage), and I'm about to learn to carve three dimensional shapes out of chunks instead of flat shapes out of sheets, and I've always wanted to learn how to weld. And when I get my confidence up as an artist, it'll be time to learn to cast metal.
People do occasionally ask me why I want to carve brass instead of casting it (for now). It's partly that I feel safer somehow carving brass than carving wax, even though logically wax should be much less intimidating to work with, and also that there's a single step that I already know the important aspects of, so I'm putting off the whole mold-making, melting safely, and pouring learning curve. And it's partly that there's a primal satisfaction to grinding away solid metal, almost like I'm pushing the shape out of the raw material by brute force or something (yes, yes, with electric motors assisting; I'm talking about the emotional response here, not the physics).
Interestingly, despite my wanting to carve metal instead of casting it for now, I do have another desire that involves making molds. Though I haven't done it in a couple of years, I enjoy making molded chocolates using store-bought molds. Pretty much from the first time I did that, I've wanted to make my own molds as well. So instead of carving something out of wax to make a mold for metal, I've been wanting to carve something out of metal to make a mold for chocolates. I need to get my hands on the right sort of plastic for making candy molds though. Imagine little chocolate krummhorns, violas da gamba, hammered dulcimers, cameras, and SCA heraldry! (Hey, anyone know where to get food-safe plastic suitable for molds that I can form in my own kitchen or workshop?)
I want to learn how to beat metal as well. I've done a
little bending (I made my own electric-guitar cookie cutter,
and I've made some simple shapes out of wire (more functional
than artistic), but I want to learn how to make more interesting
curves with a hammer. I want to learn how to dish a plate, how
to "raise" metal, how to make a bell for a
Christmas-tree-ornament-sized sackbut, how to stretch metal
without tearing it. Both cold and hot. I keep meaning to get
to one of
blackanvil's weekend open-house
blacksmithing lessons -- watching blacksmiths work the iron,
seeing the shapes emerge, with fire and sparks as extra bonus
excitement fascinated me as a child and fascinates me now, and
yes, I'd like to learn to do that. But I haven't wanted it
enough to give up something else I'm doing to make time
for it. Sooner later, I should, even if only temporarily. And
I want to learn at least the basics of working cold metal with a
hammer to form shapes. And I'll need to know when each
technique is apropriate.
I'd never thought about it before, but I wonder whether part of my desire to make three-dimensional shapes out of metal is an echo of the "I want Granddad to teach me to do this" feelings from my childhood, even though I'm approaching with a different technique for now, grinding instead of pouring. There's a satisfying tactile aspect to solid metal sculpture, especially if it's small enough to lift. And I want to be a part of that. I want the shapes in my head to come out in metal, and I want to be able to pick them up and say, "I made this." And I want to be able to pick them up and say, "This shape is now reassuringly in my hand; I got it out of my head and put it in my hand." And now that I think of it, if I ever have children, it'll be cool to be able to hand them one piece and say, "I made this," and hand them another and say, "Your great-grandfather made this." I like the idea that metal sculpture is durable, that I'll leave behind Things I made.
Y'know what's funny? I still think of myself as "not very good with my hands". Really. Yeah, I play guitar ... somehow that translates to "good with my fingers" instead of "good with my hands", and I'm not sure why. (Though that phrasing brings another activity to mind as well, which I'm told I do well.) But I have trouble making drawings come out as I'd like, I do very little of my own automobile repairs (but an ex-girlfriend did teach me body work, and I can face the task of replacing an alternator even though brakes and carbeurators scare me), and I have no confidence when it comes to carving wood or wax or doing origami (which is going to make my idea of folding a thousand origami clowns especially challenging), or sewing (I do basic repairs, but don't make clothes) or a whole lot of other things ... even things that people can point to well-done examples of and say, "Gee, Glenn, you managed it that time; why don't you think you can do this?" But the idea of carving metal seems "safe", for reasons I haven't identified. Oh, I know I'm going to have some major frustration making the three-dimensional shapes I'm carving look like what I've got in my head or whatever I'm using as a model, but the fact that I'm going to have a learning curve to climb and wasted metal along the way doesn't make me uncomfortable the way it does when the material is wood or leather ... or paint.
I finally did get some metal to carve -- a block of aluminum a couple inches on a side, and six inches of one-inch diameter brass rod -- several weeks ago so that I could start some of the carving ideas I've wanted to do, but I keep having more urgent, or more important, or simply more responsible things that I have to do, so I look at the brass, and the Dremmel tool, and I think, "No, I can't play until I do these other things. I'll get to that later." Well maybe it's time to get down to it, 'cause I'm tired of looking at it, feeling my hands twitch in anticipation, and going off to do something else.
I guess I think of artists who make money from their art as "working", and artists who merely make pretty, sometimes culturally important, things as "playing". Pretty twisted, huh? (Pretty 20th Century American, too, huh?) So I have to "give myself permission" to go make art. Maybe I should print up signs that say in large, friendly letters, "To-do today: Give yourself permission to make art," and put them on the fridge, the bathroom wall, and my bedroom door.
Anyhow, what it all adds up to, I guess, is, I like metal..
(no subject)
"playing". Pretty twisted, huh?
Well, it seems to me that it says even more about your negative attitude toward "playing" than your negative attitude toward "art". :)
So I have to "give myself permission" to go make art.
No, I don't think that's really adequate. So long as art is something you have to give yourself permission to make, you're buying into a value paradigm which is going to thwart you. I recommend skipping "permission" and going all the way to "a responsibility".
After all, that's what makes being in a band such a liberating way to make music for beginners, compared to studying solo. When someone just takes lessons, it's something they do for themselves, so they see it as a treat. When someone joins a band, their pursuit of music becomes a responsibility to other people and themselves. You don't think of practicing as something you need to give yourself "permission" to do, do you?
Laurie Riley wrote a great little book about studying the harp, in which she described a profound realization she had about her own approach to harp in the early part of her study. She had wanted to be a harpist for a long time, so she thought of practicing as a "treat". Accordingly, she put practicing after all her responsibilities as a mother and an employee, and often it fell off the end of her day. Finally, she realized what she was doing; she had prioritized herself out of ever being a harpist, because she didn't take her aspirations seriously to feel she had a responsibility to them. I recommend finding a harper friend and asking if they have a copy you could read so you can see the passage for yourself; recommend the book to them if they don't have it. ;)
Even if you aren't planning on making a career or a serious hobby out of a given art, I think you need to take seriously your yearning to be an artist-craftsman, as an expression of your personality and one role of many in your identity. Taking it seriously means allocating time and energy to it, and calculating it into your budgets for both. You might not prioritize it as highly as any particular other thing, but that would be a conscious decision, instead of reflexively dismissing it as unworthy.
Something else to think about. Another responsibility upon all adults is to fearlessly examine the facts of their lives, to confront whether they are in deed living in accord with their values, and to strive earnestly to bring their way of living into accord with their values.
So the question before you is, "What are your values?" Do you value authenticity in being? If you value being authentic in the expression of yourself, then, as I see it, you have a positive moral responsibility to incorporate your artistic side into your modus vivendi, as a regular practice. Do you value art as a human endeavor? Do you value creativity? Do you value playfulness? Do you value self-improvement through application and study? What, in your mind, constitutes a life well lived?
(no subject)
[ponders]
Huh. It does, at that. And I don't like what it says. Ick. How did I get here? (Actually I think I know...)
The comparison to music, and what you said about playing in a band, are spot on. I don't feel guilty for practicing my solo stuff, or composing, but it's because I've gotten used to practicing for the bands and thinking of that as "responsible". And when that starts to wear off, I can tell myself that any practice I do as an instrumentalist makes me better for playing with the band, even if I'm practicing different material.
I still have trouble making the time to work on personal solo recording projects though, and I need to get over that.
'You might not prioritize it as highly as any particular other thing, but that would be a conscious decision, instead of reflexively dismissing it as unworthy.'
*nod* I obviously wasn't thinking that way when I wrote this entry, but you're right. I've bought into the messages of my culture too much, and let myself be distracted by "what I have to get done" too long, and have drifted away from my priorities. I do remember a time when I was too busy working a day job (long hours for a consulting startup) to have time to play my guitar, and how unhappy that made me. And here I am doing something similar to myself. On a smaller scale, but doing it to myself nonetheless. Ouch.
Now if I can manage not to literally starve while getting back to Me ...
What you said about making my life and activities consonant with my values hit home painfully. I've got that in some aspects of my life, but I've fallen short in ways that would disappoint the self of twenty years ago, in other aspects. (That sort of thought was part of my working up the courage to start dressing the way I want to, way back when.)
'What, in your mind, constitutes a life well lived?'
And there, really, is the rub. It's so easy to keep putting off the whole-life-important things in order to take care of the right-now-urgent ones, that one can hit middle age wondering why one hasn't gotten around to the things one wants to be able to look back on when old age finally arrives. Some delayed-gratification is nessecary, of course, but "moderation in all things means moderation in moderation too." And it's too easy to lose sight of the prize (the well-lived life) in the process of taking care of the details.
Now to work on unlearning the culturally-approved reflexes. so that these decisions can be conscious and intentional again.
Your points were painful, but I thank you. I owe you.
(no subject)
It occurs to me that you do not realize what an extraordinary person you are. That is a problem because the particular sort of extraordinary person you are is not nourished in the soul by an ordinary life. The little triumphs of ordinary daily living will leave you malnurished if you attempt to subsist on them. The purpose of doing deeply gratifying things is not merely pleasure; they are the bread of your soul. They give you strength and vitality.
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(no subject)
When I start to get better, my hands have to make.
(Even thought the first thing I made after one bad period was a caddy for small objects to use at the hospital.)
Acts of Creation
Though you work with words or metal, living things or stone or glass,
If you don't love what you're making, it will never come to pass.
From the humming of a baby, to the works of God above,
Every act of creation is an act of love.
(no subject)
(no subject)
I got a "Not Found" when I tried to follow "including some in metal" (http://www.livejournal.com/users/dglenn/53190.html/#cutid1). I would like to see the niftythings you've made in metal sometime.
I have a couple of pieces of jewelry that I treasure from my grandmother. She loved to garden. I love to see gardens, even if other of my sibs seem to be the ones who inherited her green thumb.
Hugs!
(no subject)
(no subject)