Another deceptively nice day at the Falls. I say that because our area is experiencing an acute drought. We have had just about an inch and half of rain the last couple of months. It has also been unseasonably warm with highs in the low 70 degree range for a couple of weeks. Again, the odd acting weather has seemed notable to me. There has been color in the leaves, but they have been so dry. In areas, no fires are allowed because the conditions are right for a conflagration.
Because we haven’t had a hard frost yet, you can still run into butterflies at the Falls of the Ohio. Pictured here is a Dainty Sulphur butterfly also known as the Dwarf Yellow (Nathalis iole). This is a tiny, dime-sized butterfly that is extending its range across the country. You can still find Monarchs and Viceroys, but they tend to be ragged specimens just waiting for the frost to do them in. I have enjoyed butterfly watching this year and I look forward to building on my experiences with them in 2011.
I returned to my trusty studio spot under the willows for this adventure. I don’t have much of a story this time…just the straight scoop on what happened on this trip. I was pleasantly surprised to find that earlier visitors had taken it upon themselves to upright the sculptures that were knocked down and assaulted. See previous post from a few weeks a go for that story. The figure I have named “Marlin”…I did find on the ground and he was missing his fishing bobber eyes, but I was able to fix him in short order. My collecting bag always has a few stray pairs of “eyes” for any emergency. Finding that somebody actually cared enough to set these pieces up inspired me to add a new work to the group and here is one of the first images of it. I call this one the Agitator for a couple of reasons.
The first reason comes from his hat which is the agitator from an old washing machine that the river parked here months a go. The eyes are again found fishing bobbers and the nose is the handle from an old paint brush. I find a lot of brush handles, sans bristles, at the Falls of the Ohio. The figure is a big one and would look nice in the space that was left open in this particular grouping. Here is my only shot of this piece standing with his Styro-family on a sunny day in the Ohio River Valley.
The second reason I called this newer work Agitator is the second after I snapped the above photo…he fell down and his head split apart. Sounds gruesome, but remember it’s just polystyrene. I became agitated to have to remake the head, but stuff like this happens using such poor materials.
I went back to my Styrofoam cache and found the next best head and created version two. I think the second incarnation looks a little goofier, but maybe this was what was intended to happen all along?
Since the piece was now different I added the plastic horse shoe and changed the positioning of his arms. This is the way it looked for the second group portrait.
While I was making this latest figure, I was approached by a couple of people interested in what I was doing. I had two nice conversations and posed for a couple of images. I took the opportunity to ask one of the people to take my picture with my Styro-family and this one is for my mother! It’s one of the rare images of the artistatexit0 in this blog and gives some sense for the scale of these chunks of Styrofoam floating in the river.
I’ll close with this final image of the group facing the river. For the short time these figures remain standing, they are a fun surprise to come across while hiking among the willows. Happy trails to you…
These group portraits are such a lovely suprise! Nice to finally see you on one of them too:-) I like alligator 2 better than the first version. That hat looks like the paddle out of an old washing machine – is it?
How heartwarming that people actually went to the trouble of uprighting the figures – and appreciating them, especially regarding what happened to your work recently….
You’ve taken some great butterfly pictures this year already – what a thriving and colourful area this river is – its been a treat to see all this, and I look forward to what next year shall bring – thanks:-)
Thank you Lynda…your comments are prized by me and I’m appreciative that you respond to what I’m doing out here. I still don’t have a good word to describe what it is I’m doing by the river. I think in part, this continues to keep me interested. I am looking forward to the new year and what it brings to the Falls of the Ohio.
So glad you thought to have a picture of yourself taken with family. The others are not complete without you! 🙂 I had no idea these were this large, Al.
Hi Leslie! Yes, I thought I would throw myself in there this time for scale purposes. Thinking back, I believe the largest foam figure I have made was about 11 or 12 feet tall!
How great to see you standing with this strange and delightful posse of styrofoam folk.. Wow, they are really enormous; like Leslie, I didn’t at all realize that your figures were this big. It would be such a gift to wander into them while on a hike–I just can’t imagine what it would be like to suddenly be standing face to face with these almost-human characters! How great that some previous visitors liked them enough to put them back on their styro-feet.
I like playing with the ambiguity of scale out here. It forces you to look around the sculpture to find a reference point. How different the river is now from when you visited! You can practically walk across it in the shallow areas.
Nice to see the person that gives life to the styro guys!
They are big and thank God you make something beautiful out of them instead of letting them stay as eye sore.
🙂
Thank you…I appreciate your kind remarks!