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Sunday, 28 December 2003
Who Am I?

















The 2003 Winter Gallery exhibition of the Southold Historical Society was entitled "Rooted in the Soil: Southold's Agrarian Heritage." My wife Louise is on the exhibition committee and this show was largely our brainchild in conception and installation. It was an invitational opportunity for local artists to offer images of the local heritage and landscape in a local venue. I designed panels hung from chain to increase surface area of the room and I executed a carved mahogany frame done for a painting of a Long Island vineyard by my colleague in construction, Joan Chambers.

We were asked to submit a brief biographical statement, which I repeat here:

"Bennett Sykes Blackburn's life work is the realization of three-dimensional form. This has been a dialogue between the practical and the visionary. His Honors thesis at Wesleyan University explored both abstract woodcarving and furniture design. In the 25 years since moving to Long Island's North Fork, the practical side has morphed from commissioned furniture to the restoration and renovation of woodwork in historic houses. This has been both a livelihood and the means to a home, the circa 1815 Overton-Fitz house in Peconic.

Significant sculptural accomplishiments include a suite of four lifesized walnut figures at Duck Walk Winery; "The People of Fire," a suite of three bronzes depicting the stages of healing from childhood sexual abuse; the "Angel Series," complex abstract walnut carvings; the "Tourist Trap," for "Footfalls" in Greenport; Sykesgallery, North Adams, Massachusetts, a two year changing storefront installation; and learning to pay attention when the sculpture gods call.

Recent work has explored compression and tension compositions using fitted stone, steel rod and chain.

Wednesday evenings his studio hosts a meeting of the Peconic Wood Sculptors, whose work was the subject of the Southold Historical Society's 2001 exhibit, "Out of the Wood." More work can be seen at www.sykesgallery.com and in private collections across the USA."






Posted by Bennett at 10:01 AM EST | post your comment (0) | link to this post
Updated: Thursday, 26 May 2005 8:33 PM EDT
Who Am I?-II
















So there you have it. I don't earn a living as a sculptor, I am a joiner, or if you prefer, a carpenter. I get the tasty job once in a while......as of this writing I am nearing completion on the exterior restoration of the circa 1649 Old House in Cutchogue, New York. Over a mile of quarter sawn white oak clapboards predrilled and nailed into the oak framing, and countless thousands of dollars in 16/4 white oak for the windows. If you have more interest in the window restoration go here.





Posted by Bennett at 9:54 AM EST | post your comment (0) | link to this post
Updated: Sunday, 23 October 2005 10:23 AM EDT
The Angels Depart



At the time I was maintaining Sykesgallery, North Adams, Mass., I was convinced that I was doing the work that would establish my reputation: the Angel Series. The internet and the storefront installation would be the venues to recognition.

That expectation imploded. Not that there was no feedback at all. There was the woman who stuck her head in the door at Eagle Street while I was changing the sculpture on the 2/3 rpm motor drive bases and asked if I was Mr Sykes, No, I'm Bennett Sykes Blackburn....."Oh. Well, thank you." And there was the day that Eagle Street was filled with sand and turned into a beach party and I watched from my beach chair while a young man walked away from the window and stopped, shook his head and said "Damn, I really liked that! I'm going to look again." and he turned around and did so. And there was the still small voice that said quietly in my mind's ear, "Thank you for the Angels." I have also had kind e-mails from students and accomplished wood carvers: maybe a dozen people took the time to write.

So what happened? The equation of time and money. This work is labor and time intensive almost beyond imagining. I have never asked for a price that translated into a hourly wage that was more than a check-out person at the grocery store earns. I understand that time is not a factor in the Art World valuation of a piece, but when I must earn a dayjob wage to buy my time to create, it makes little sense to sell the work and not be able to afford the time to replace it. Bottom line: a career without patronage doesn't exist. It's a ship dead in the water.

My last three business transactions have helped point me in a different direction. The person who commissioned an Elmwood plaque for the local Town Hall, ended our relationship with the words "An artist cannot expect to be well paid for his work because he enjoys it." A collector of wood carvings likewise gave me the gift of a concluding sentence of three clauses, "I love your work, but you're not an investment, and you cost too much." Another dealer-collector has never tired of telling me that everything else in his collection has established resale value, but my work is a consumable. Thanks guys for the insight.

Something in the universe has been pushing me toward another form of sculptural expression, collaborating with my wife and having fun. A ship dead in the water has transmogrified into a carbon fiber stealth craft that flies where it will, undetected by collectors, galleries, museums or the public. Is anybody reading this?




Posted by Bennett at 9:26 AM EST | post your comment (1) | link to this post
Updated: Sunday, 28 December 2003 12:01 PM EST

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