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OBSERVATIONS AND IDEAS ON BEAUTY IN EVERYDAY LIFE

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This week I am devoting my time to designing the 5” Summer Angel. This angel is the second angel in a series of five angels titled Seasons of a New Millennium; actually the 5th series of five 5” angels since I began in 1980. Wow that’s a lot of fives – it’s also interesting that the Biblical meaning of five is “Grace”. I am sure that only by the grace of God that I will have finally been able to complete the design of this angel.

I started this series in 2000 with the Spring Angel and it is now 12 years later that I will introduce the 2nd angel. This has been a long wait for my collectors. I had a not so recent conversation with a dear and faithful collector, Sydney Uthoff. She asked me when I would be introducing my Summer Angel. She went on to comment that it had been a long wait for summer to come and now I can joyfully let you know that Summer is almost here; in fact in few short weeks we will be offering this new angel who holds a butterfly. The butterfly is such a magnificent symbol for summer; full of lightness, movement, beauty, warmth and last but not least the symbol of metamorphosis. I chose the butterfly to represent summer 12 years ago and now am aware that this theme is perfectly appropriate for the reintroduction of the 2nd angel in the Seasons of a New Millennium series. The theme of the whole series is “To everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under heaven.”

The photographs above include some of the processes that I have been doing this week. I always start with sketches and sometimes the final design looks just like the sketch and other times it evolves into an entirely different design. This is always an exciting process because as a design evolves it is a rhythmic process where I give myself over to the design and let it flow to see where it takes me. I know that I have to work diligently and be completely confident that the final result will be good. Otherwise the rabbit trails and mistakes along the way have the power to discourage me. I am thankful for each design and feel fortunate to be on the receiving end.

Although I had lots of different ideas for the butterfly, my final selection has ended up to be a rather simple shell butterfly with a round overall shape and a scalloped edge to echo the shell body. I have pressed and shaped and formed these delicate parts and pieces and I am refining edges and putting them together to form the final butterfly design.

You can see that my design table is a bit messy. Even though my table is large I find that as I work almost every square inch get covered with models, tools, clay scraps and sketches until I am cramped and working on the edge of the table with no room to spare. It’s time to finish when there’s no room left.

The last image shows the initial model that I will now caste in plaster. There’s still work to be done in finalizing thicknesses and refining the final form for the master mold. I’ll give you updates as I finish the butterfly and work on the head design.

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