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| Mount Rushmore National Monument
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Four huge faces carved by Gutzon Borglum
into a South Dakota mountain in the 1920s and 30s are serving as an
inspiration this summer for stone carvers working on a much smaller
scale. As she gently taps a hammer along the surface of her
sculpture, 62-year-old artist Priscilla Schmidt explains why she's
being so careful. "At this point I don't want to knock a big chunk
out, like I did yesterday, at the end of the day and have to file it
down. So, I'm just having to take it really slow and careful; and
use a lot of these rasps . . . at least to smooth it, if not help
form it."
Ms. Schmidt has worked in many media, but never stone. So, when
she read in the local paper that Mount Rushmore National Monument
was offering classes in stone carving, she jumped at the
opportunity. "I worked here at Mount Rushmore when I was in college
one summer," she says, adding that she's loved the place since then.
"It is inspiring. The site is inspiring. The beauty is just
wonderful... it's awesome. So, that's part of the mystique of being
here and doing this."
The idea for the stone-carving class originated with sculptor DJ
Garrity, who works for
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Sculptor D.J. Garrity is teaching
stone-carving classes at Mt. Rushmore National
Park |
the National Park
Service at Mount Rushmore. "What we're trying to do," he explains,
"is create faces emerging from the stone. Whatever they see in that
stone, we try to encourage that, and just give them some guidance...
some direction to bring out their vision."
Classes are open to all ages and all levels of experience. After
selecting a chunk of limestone - softer than the granite above them
- the students are given a hammer, chisel and rasp. Then it's five
days of hard work, patience, and letting your imagination go...at
the same time learning to respect the stone. As DJ Garrity points
out, what the artist has in mind and what the stone gives back may
be two completely
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Priscilla Schmidt found working with
stone a very humbling
experience |
different images. He
points to the face emerging from Ms. Schmidt's sculpture as an
example. "She went from it being a man - a very masculine face - to
a woman's face, back to a man's face. Now she's narrowing it down
again. So, all these developments, all these stages of the stone
carving are new to her, so she's getting to feel what it really is
to be able to work in this fashion, where you can't put it back if
you knock a nose off. And our record here for one afternoon is 6
noses!"
But even professionals encounter problems that force them to
change their original design. DJ Garrity notes that sculptor Gutzon
Borglum planned to have Thomas Jefferson to the left of George
Washington, not in his present location on Washington's right.
However, after working on Jefferson's face for a year, he
encountered a vein of softer stone and a big vertical crack. "So he
blew it off the mountain, brought it back around to where we see
Thomas Jefferson today." Mr. Garrity says his students can relate
his dilemma to their efforts. "They can look up and say, 'You know,
Gutzon Borglum... I can really understand what he's going through up
there, in a way. It was a colossal work up there, but still, he had
these same frustrations and these same issues... on a colossal
scale.' The stone is gonna dictate what we're gonna do up here. Not
what I want it to do, but rather what the stone's going to allow me
to do."
Not everyone in class is daunted by the great stone faces above
them. Eight year-old
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| Eight year-old London Kahler takes a
stab at curving a stone horse |
London Kahler
is focused on carving a horse. "First I kind of just chipped away
the rock, til I get some kind of shape, and then as three days went
by, it's really making progress," she says, smoothing its side with
her rasp. She picks up her hammer and chisel again. " I think we're
gonna gloss it or something before we take it home. I think it'll be
a perfect thing for my room."
Whether his students are 6 or 60, DJ Garrity says they all have
fun. "It's actually a lot of fun. And I feel lucky to be able to do
it. And it's been very rewarding for us... for me, as an individual,
to work with these students of different age brackets and to see
their successes and, at times, their setbacks. But their willingness
to continue, and the focus that they've brought to it." It was that
same dedication and focus that Gutzon Borglum brought to this
mountain more than half a century ago.
DJ Garrity hopes that his stone-carving classes will draw even
more students next year, to sit in the shadow of the great granite
monument and be inspired.