Winter’s Gift

Winter’s Gift

80” x 20” x 20”

Steel, plant, soil, paint

Most sculptures are inanimate. They are placed on pedestals, often in museums and in fine homes. This one is not inanimate. It is living.  Something about it causes us to pause.

Why do we slow?  Art awakens reflection, gets us thinking, stirs feeling. “Winter’s Gift” does that.

Martin Helldorfer 

1936

Children of war

The Child Among Debris

17″ x 14″ x 7″

Steel, art board, paint

Today’s news documents in word and image the bombings in war torn countries. Neighborhoods are leveled and thousands of families displaced.  Tonight’s news was about Gaza. It is said that the number of children murdered exceeds the number of combatants. 

All week I found myself cutting and welding together dozens of small squares to form a web of sorts in the shape of a ball. Using a laser I cut out the image of a child with outstretched arms, one hand holding flowers, the other a bird. I placed that image within the rounded ball that I had made. Then crushed it.  This sculpture, a child among debris, is result.  I find it striking.

Burning Bush – 2

Burning Bush – 2

58” x 24” x 24”

Steel

The angel told Moses to remove his shoes as he approached a burning bush … not because the soil was hot but because it was holy. Chief Black Elk felt similarly. Remember, he mused, “The Holy Land is everywhere.” 

This sculpture is my effort to be mindful of  the sacredness of what we are about,  however grand, valued or mundane.