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I Have Been Sculpting Faces And Bodies From Driftwood For Over 17 Years
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I Have Been Sculpting Faces And Bodies From Driftwood For Over 17 Years

Uncanny Lifelike Faces From Non-Carved Pieces Of Found WoodSince 2001 I Have Been Sculpting Faces And Bodies From Non-Carved Pieces Of DriftwoodI Have Been Sculpting Faces And Bodies From Driftwood For Over 17 YearsSince 2001 I've Been Sculpting Lifelike Faces Out Of Found Pieces Of WoodArtist Uses Found Pieces Of Wood To Sculpt These Uncanny Lifelike FacesI Have Been Sculpting Faces And Bodies From Driftwood For Over 17 YearsI Have Been Sculpting Faces And Bodies From Driftwood For Over 17 YearsI Have Been Sculpting Faces And Bodies From Driftwood For Over 17 YearsI Have Been Sculpting Faces And Bodies From Driftwood For Over 17 YearsI Have Been Sculpting Faces And Bodies From Driftwood For Over 17 Years
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Since 2001 I have been sculpting with found wood; assembling mostly faces and more recently, even bodies, from thousands of hand-picked pieces. The sculptures are comprised of non-carved, naturally colored wood that I collect myself from nature’s various regions. So far I have used wood found in nearly 40 U.S. states, Canada, Mexico, and Ireland.

I consider what I’ve been doing with the faces as an adult to be the recreation of my childhood experience perceiving nature spirits in the woods. As a child as well as through adolescence I would explore woodsy areas often. I would continually find myself awe-stricken, believing I was privy to extraordinary beings able to show themselves through the various forms of nature. It was later explained to me that my artistic mind probably had an advanced case of pareidolia-the phenomenon of seeing faces in things that are not, in fact, faces in the usual corporeal sense.

Having spent much time processing these experiences I would have alone and without witnesses, it wasn’t until several years later that the series of found wood faces commenced. It began in Prescott, Arizona where I first attended college at age 19. Before attending Prescott College I had pencil drawn these wild, intricate helmets which were also masks with the idea of actually creating them to wear for performance art. I called them “wilderness helmets”and was very enthusiastic about them. In an art class called Art & Nature I proposed the idea of making one having lied about making several before. In reality I had collected materials for years in New England with the intention to make one, employing wood, rocks, shells, etc. but never actually had.

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So finally I did make one in the class that was quite something visually, although cumbersome and painful to wear. It would make me dizzy and leave marks on my forehead and cheeks which a couple people thought was pretty funny. I subsequently attempted a second wilderness helmet that was a little more ergonomic and very otherworldly even though its components were ironically terrestrial. In the process of hunting for materials in the pinion pine forests and high desert chaparrals I started seeing eyes and parts of nostrils and lips and the rest was history. I quickly made 2 wall hanging relief faces and my passion was redirected away from the wilderness helmets towards the faces.

I have been making the faces ever since then and somewhere along my 17 years of experimentation with the medium I figured out I could make it a career. To pursue an artistic path isn’t always easy by any means however, I still feel I’ve made an earnest and courageous attempt at living the proverbial dream.

When I’m working on my sculptures I never know what will happen. I sort of just let the wood I use guide my hand. The wood collectively shows me what it does or does not want to connect to through trial and error and that process is my sounding board for decision making. Sometimes I get in the flow and the bulk of the character just evolves rapidly over a few weeks. Other times a sculpture may take years and much frustration is endured. At risk of losing some of my audience I might dare to say the personalities of the sculptures are revealed through multiple sessions wherein it feels I am channeling the result of their individual essences and forms.

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Although I am always learning new tricks I have not exceeded 5 finished works within one year. I believe with a larger studio space I could be more prolific yet art is something I don’t believe should be forced in order to produce inventory. I typically submit to letting it happen as it does.

I believe the results of my art are really the results of my life in a grander sense; Had I not gone to the places I did for whatever reasons, the pieces of wood I happened to see and collect would probably never be side by side, let alone integrated together in a piece of art. Since moving to Northern California in 2011 I have used much more driftwood than I had in previous years, finding the coastal expanse from Sonoma County, CA up to Southern Oregon particularly suitable for materials and inspiration. After all, to elucidate, my inspiration comes from the aesthetics of the wood I find.

Pictures by Daniel Blue Photography and Illuminatrix Photography.

More info: Instagram | eyevantumbleweed.com

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Bennett Ewing (Eyevan Tumbleweed)

Bennett Ewing (Eyevan Tumbleweed)

Author, Community member

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Bennett Ewing, better known as "Eyevan Tumbleweed," is a Found Wood Sculptor based in Sonoma County, CA, USA. A nature lover with an art intensive background of over 20 years, he has worked in various creative mediums not limited to visual arts. At the turn of the century Eyevan found his niche in found wood. He gathers bits of wood from all over North America and neither carves nor colors the pieces he unites to create his sculptures.

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Bennett Ewing (Eyevan Tumbleweed)

Bennett Ewing (Eyevan Tumbleweed)

Author, Community member

Bennett Ewing, better known as "Eyevan Tumbleweed," is a Found Wood Sculptor based in Sonoma County, CA, USA. A nature lover with an art intensive background of over 20 years, he has worked in various creative mediums not limited to visual arts. At the turn of the century Eyevan found his niche in found wood. He gathers bits of wood from all over North America and neither carves nor colors the pieces he unites to create his sculptures.

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Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Thanks, Universal Mel! I've always said that my series would make great characters for a big budget fantasy motion picture. I even posted 4 or 5 extremely limited animations via motion portrait on my instagram page in hopes someone in the movie industry might come across them provoked to think along those lines.

Load More Replies...
JillVille
Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The vision that must be there before they even start putting the pieces together... just amazing!

Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

There is actually never a vision first with the exception of imagining glimpses of finished faces in the distant future sort of like meeting someone you've never met in a dream...Most of the time I start by making an eye or a nose or mouth out of however many pieces of wood it might take and that comes together sort of randomly. At that point the rest of the face is then kind of built around the first part. At that stage I'm really asking the wood what it wants to collectively do with the confluence of the grains and directions of the forms. By being inquisitive, trying possibilities, I eventually find a sectional match. Each section is sort of like a room with a locked door and there are a piles of skeleton keys on the floor. One of the keys will fit the lock if I keep trying.

Load More Replies...
Jef Bateman
Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

These are really cool. How long does it take to make one? You say you make five pieces a year, but I am wondering how much time you spend in your studio.

Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The short answer is that the average piece takes me around 3 months with burst periods where I'm working nearly non-stop for weeks at a time and if I'm lucky the finishing accents or unresolved areas won't take another year or more to figure out. Some of my best pieces have taken 6 months or more, others somehow are resolved start to finish within 1-2 months. However a great turn out in a small amount of time is rare or lucky or what have you. People also forget that what it takes sometimes for me to be on fire and create a great sculpture in 2 months may have been the result of 10 years of collecting wood from all over the place...just so that those particular pieces come together from storms 7 years apart or wood from the desert meeting wood from Vermont...That's where I think a lot of the magic happens. In truth, regardless of time spend actually working in the studio, there are countless hours invested to produce the results I get. Most would not have the patience and dedication.

Load More Replies...
Marnee DeRider
Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I can't even imagine how a person can do this. It's an overused word, but these are just incredible. (Will you marry me?)

Sunny Bunny
Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

This is amazing and inspiring work - please by all means keep it up and keep sharing. Thank you.

Susann Campbell
Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Thank you so much for making these faces. I see eyes, nose and mouth on wood and rocks and just about every thing that has texture ever since I was around five years old. I was labeled special by a few people but Mother stood by me. Now I know from many years later that I was not the only one. LOL We are Special with a gift of life in everything we see.

Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Amazing! You're welcome and thank you for sharing this. Yes, I've met a few people who have had this kind of experience in their youths. There is a wonderful book you might like by Bev Doolittle where each illustrated nature scene has characters hidden within. I hope to someday write and illustrate a children's story book on this very same theme, just structured differently and loosely around my own experience.

Load More Replies...
Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Thanks, Universal Mel! I've always said that my series would make great characters for a big budget fantasy motion picture. I even posted 4 or 5 extremely limited animations via motion portrait on my instagram page in hopes someone in the movie industry might come across them provoked to think along those lines.

Load More Replies...
JillVille
Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The vision that must be there before they even start putting the pieces together... just amazing!

Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

There is actually never a vision first with the exception of imagining glimpses of finished faces in the distant future sort of like meeting someone you've never met in a dream...Most of the time I start by making an eye or a nose or mouth out of however many pieces of wood it might take and that comes together sort of randomly. At that point the rest of the face is then kind of built around the first part. At that stage I'm really asking the wood what it wants to collectively do with the confluence of the grains and directions of the forms. By being inquisitive, trying possibilities, I eventually find a sectional match. Each section is sort of like a room with a locked door and there are a piles of skeleton keys on the floor. One of the keys will fit the lock if I keep trying.

Load More Replies...
Jef Bateman
Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

These are really cool. How long does it take to make one? You say you make five pieces a year, but I am wondering how much time you spend in your studio.

Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The short answer is that the average piece takes me around 3 months with burst periods where I'm working nearly non-stop for weeks at a time and if I'm lucky the finishing accents or unresolved areas won't take another year or more to figure out. Some of my best pieces have taken 6 months or more, others somehow are resolved start to finish within 1-2 months. However a great turn out in a small amount of time is rare or lucky or what have you. People also forget that what it takes sometimes for me to be on fire and create a great sculpture in 2 months may have been the result of 10 years of collecting wood from all over the place...just so that those particular pieces come together from storms 7 years apart or wood from the desert meeting wood from Vermont...That's where I think a lot of the magic happens. In truth, regardless of time spend actually working in the studio, there are countless hours invested to produce the results I get. Most would not have the patience and dedication.

Load More Replies...
Marnee DeRider
Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I can't even imagine how a person can do this. It's an overused word, but these are just incredible. (Will you marry me?)

Sunny Bunny
Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

This is amazing and inspiring work - please by all means keep it up and keep sharing. Thank you.

Susann Campbell
Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Thank you so much for making these faces. I see eyes, nose and mouth on wood and rocks and just about every thing that has texture ever since I was around five years old. I was labeled special by a few people but Mother stood by me. Now I know from many years later that I was not the only one. LOL We are Special with a gift of life in everything we see.

Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Amazing! You're welcome and thank you for sharing this. Yes, I've met a few people who have had this kind of experience in their youths. There is a wonderful book you might like by Bev Doolittle where each illustrated nature scene has characters hidden within. I hope to someday write and illustrate a children's story book on this very same theme, just structured differently and loosely around my own experience.

Load More Replies...
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