Sketch of an Art Sale
This particular piece of art has such depth and disaster
that it bears a little more scrutiny as it gains even more character, which
means that it packs in more tension and fascinating flaws as well as the marks
of love and acceptance . The moment I laid eyes on him, I saw a big disaster and a touching story of survival as he was in a
field up in Chimayo and I had just bought him for $150 and took a trailer up
there to bring him to Adventure Trails Ranch, the name I had snagged from
Laina, my grandmother, on her deathbed; the name of a children’s magazine she
published and mostly illustrated back in the late 30s and 40s, based in
Steamboat Springs, Colorado, a real cow town back then and ‘ not fit for a widow with 5 young children’,
the local realtors said as they refused to show her any property so she
‘marched’ out and found a place to buy by herself, a cabin by a tiny creek in a
small valley, later moving out of there
and buying some more contiguous land
nearby, up higher with a view and an old homestead-type log
cabin and another larger stream with little speckled trout in it, that tasted
really good. She taught me how to
‘clean’ them by taking a knife and stabbing through the end of their intestinal
track and cutting their soft white bellies up the the gills, cutting the gills
just right to grab the whole mess and drag out the guts and all and then cook
them by coating them in oil, then dragging them around some corn meal and then
frying them in butter. You could catch
them with a hook and a worm grabbed from the super black soil near the creek or
even a safety pin and a crooked little root would do to get one. I was with her many years later, in her sky
blue International Scout, down in La Jara, as she cried when she had to sell all what was
left of her herd of horses to a Ute Indian guy with a thin pocketbook for a few hundred dollars. I had never seen her cry before, really, as
she was pretty tough, but I had to convince her
that the era had ended and it was
time (actually way past time…..). I
loved looking at the horses and I liked riding them, but in my world it was
mostly just work; breaking the ice on the water trough, feeding them, moving
them, seeing their various tragedies unfold, so when I had a young family I got
the usual pressure to ‘get a horse’ and so I finally said that I was not
interested in a horse but might consider a donkey. Here in Chimayo was Benjamin ( who came to be
called BJ) and he was injured all over his body from kicks and bites from
the other horses in the field with
him. It almost killed us and him to get
him loaded in the trailer but we finally got him home, where he stayed for the
next 20 or so years, under my (sometime dubious) care and becoming a huge part
of my life and consciousness.
BJ was a mammoth burro, which means he was huge for a
donkey. I rode him and packed him and,
eventually found him a few companions, like Pinta the paint pony who I found by
advertising to board ‘an old nag’ to
keep him company, then Candy the miniature horse and then Isabella, a normal
sized burro. BJ was loaded with
personality and every day was an adventure out here on the ranch and all of the
neighbors knew him; probably better than
they really wanted to. Despite his
basically kind nature, he was real smart and always a hand full and loved to
escape and rediscover the neighbor’s dog food, loved to chase dogs, loved to
eat. He looked pregnant much of the
time, but was strong and fast and when the neighbors got together to take a
group ride, he (we) always ran up to the front and stayed there, much to the
chagrin of my fellow riders on their handsome steeds. A donkey is the sort of creature that, if you
are not familiar with their looks, you , like me, are startled by their
features; you are expecting to see a
horse but run smack up against the large head, the stiff whiskers and scruffy mane, the grey
color, the big eyes and massive ears, the small hooves and the scraggly and
blunt instrument of their tails. Looking
into their eyes is like looking into eternity and pondering the meaning of it
all.
I did ‘controlled grazing’ with him for many years, working
the ½ mile of Galisteo Creek bed, up and down and alternating the various
fields I had fenced off and tying him to a long chain and rope each day and
moving that around all summer to be sure he got food and the land was
tended. It was an extraordinary learning
experience for me as each day had some sort of tangle, drama, time stretching
event. I often was trying to get to work
in a hurry and was frustrated because as soon as I got his lead rope on and out
the gate, then he would lurch here and there with his utterly massive neck and
start grazing on the grass and weeds and trees and whatever else he fancied in
the moment. I fought him for years and
poked him with branches and sticks and prodded him with whatever I could till
we finally got to where we were going and I tied him up. One day, ‘decades’ into this routine I decided to try something
different; I threw the utterly soft braided lead rope across his back and
headed for where I was wanting to go.
This was an experiment that occurred to me. He kept eating away like he was want to do,
but then, as I rounded the corner out of sight he, all of a sudden, would run
towards me and stop right where I was.
Then I would stop where I wanted and he ran up and held his head high
and I attached the hasp and walked away.
This was stunning and wonderful!
All of those years might have led to this mutual decision and solution
that probably troubled him too. I
decided to do a piece of art around him and this new ‘string theory’ and so I
threw the (now magic) rope on his shoulders while he was eating out there and
took a simple crude digital shot, then I carved the scene into a large sand
mold to be a heavy bas relief piece in cast iron, the iron pour with the Iron
Tribe down at Highlands at the foundry where I had been learning the skills to
do this kind of work. The iron pours are
wild events (rodeos) in some ways and
lots of people making decisions and trying to pour lots of molds and avoid
getting hurt. It is colorful with the
molten iron and the sparks and the heat and the ladles being carried around by two
people and a director to help coordinate the pour. I had carefully leveled my piece and was
satisfied with the setup, but, to my horror, at the end of the pour I saw some
students lugging the large mold to a different place closer to the cupola
furnace and setting it down roughly and unleveled and I saw it crack in a few
places, and I tried to level it quickly by eye as the ladle was headed my way
and I banked it some with sand and they started to pour and the cracks were
channeling the molten metal away and onto the sand and then they ran out of
iron (which is a big no no) and came back as soon as they could to pour the
rest and I was mortified by then and traumatized and it poured to the top and
maybe the cold joint would hold and then I was dragging it to the loading dock
still hotter than hell and someone decided to spray it with the hose (another
thing that I would consider an insult) and I was pissed and I got it home and
cleaned it up and noticed it had these beautiful color changes from the water
spray and the cracks made it all the more ancient and interesting and I sold it
not long afterwards, but not before I made a rubber mold.
I got interested in
glass casting and so I decided to make a glass piece using that mold, so I made
a plaster mold and I, at the end of the process before the kiln, used a little
piece of refractory mortar to seal up a small imperfection in the mold and dam off a potential glass flow. How was I to know that that tiny piece of
different material would, at the very end, slightly ‘catch’ the glass and set
up the conditions for a crack, but it did.
Later I went up to Montana to an iron pour and made a complicated mold
for a frame for this piece and had a series of similar disasters then, too,
that creating interesting cracks and wabi sabi features to deal with as I
created the whole piece. The crack
became larger and then a full split, and I decided, at last, to do something
interesting with the piece and the crack and put a magnetic strip in the void
and then carefully placed old wire brush bristles into that area and then I
sprinkled iron from the creek bed on the magnet to create an affect that
simulated that first glance at a burro and those whiskers and characterized the
whole experience of being with this creature.
The experience of having to put my donkey down some years
ago was extraordinary, also and bears repeating as it fits into this scenario
and this codification of the clumsy, brutal and touching life event of raising
a mammoth donkey. He became
incapacitated from years of fighting hoof problems that began with being
overfed, probably and he had foundered many years earlier and it caught up with
him and me, finally. He could not get up
for weeks and I took my front bucket and strapped it to him and raised him up
and he could not hold himself up and I realized it was over. Now I do not like talking about these things
lightly, and it was, like with my grandmother, a rare event that I cry, but I
did and said farewell and took my 22 rifle out to kill it (which is was all the
yahoos I know had talked about doing in these cases….and I believed them…which
I don’t anymore) and I shot him between the eyes and up) and he bolted upright and stood, dazed. I thought my gun had jammed and I was
desperately trying to shoot him again to
make him drop dead. I managed to get
another bullet or two in him and he was still standing and began to walk. I ran into the shop and found my hunting
rifle and by then he had walked around the bulldozer (there to bury him) and
was leaning on it looking bluntly ( and with love I might add) at me. I dropped him instantly with the big gun and
buried him right there. I have learned
over the years that euthanizing and death has its own poetry and the stories
are often profound and important, which is why I am writing this piece.
You would think that this story was over now; the high drama
finished and the beauty of imperfectness well described, but there is more, in
my mind. I put this piece of glass art
in a gallery on Canyon Road, the last gallery on the right, and is has been
outside for a full winter and done quite well that way. I put a good light behind it so that the
greens and blues and clear glass show up nicely and it has the feeling of just
what it should; a timeless description celebrating imperfection and beauty and life and death
and timelessness in a real genuine way.
A woman walked into the gallery and bought it the other day and she put
a deposit on it to hold it so that after
her surgery in a few days she could have me come and hang it in her home. I was, of course, elated. A week passed and I heard that the surgery
went well and she was doing well and had mentioned being excited about getting
her piece to her house. I was flattered
and glad to know she was doing well and conscious of her acquisition. A few more weeks passed and I got a message
from the gallery that her brother had called and said that she would probably
not last another month and that he wanted the deposit back. I was sad, but , somehow, not surprised by
all this as this is what I was talking about all along. The artist, the subject, the art and the
buyer were ensnarled in the same cosmic drama from beginning to end; no
question about it. I wish I could have
talked to her to see what she saw and compare notes, as she may be what we
artists are always hoping for; an informed observer. I often think about the donkey out there on
a brutally cold winter’s night in the ice, mud and snow and the open sky and
stars above them, and wonder what they are thinking and how they can possibly
survive with such thin ankles…….
Thor Sigstedt, November 30, 2012 Adventure Trails Ranch, Spirit Valley
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