Tuesday, September 02, 2008




Sculpting a Life
Susan Gallacher-Turner’s turn in the Pacific Northwest.


This weekend in Portland, Oregon, I went to Art In The Pearl, a Labor Day weekend art festival with music, food and kid’s art activities. It’s a gathering of local and regional artists showing work from ceramics, paintings, sculptures, fused glass and photography to hand-crafted leather goods, jewelry, baskets, felted coats and hats. It’s also a gathering of artist guilds and groups doing demonstrations and giving out information to anyone in the community interested in learning more about art. This year, instead of just watching the demos and admiring the art, I was able to have a small part in the event.




As a new member of the Pacific Northwest Sculptors Guild, I was allowed to hang one of my copper repousse’ pieces in the guild tent. Every year that I’ve gone to Art In The Pearl, I’ve always checked out their tent, admired the art and picked up a brochure telling myself I’d join. Last year, I finally did it. It’s been an eye-opening experience. I’ve met many talented artists. Learned about a wide variety of sculpture media. Gotten some really helpful advice. And participated in group shows and demos all over Portland that I wouldn’t have had access to without the guild.

I’ll admit I’ve never thought of myself as a ‘group’ person. I’ve always been comfortable working on my own but I have to say that joining this group has been a great experience for me. And although, I don’t feel that I’ve done much for the group, yet, just a newsletter article or two and a contact list for the president; I look forward to doing and learning more.

Because I think that although sculpting in my life is, at times a solitary process, there’s a need to share, to open up and to learn from other artists and how they sculpt their own lives.

Read Susan’s posts every other Friday in the Joy of Living Creatively. Visit her website at susangt.com or blog at http://sculpturepdx.blogspot.com

1 comment:

Janet Grace Riehl said...

"Because I think that although sculpting in my life is, at times a solitary process, there’s a need to share, to open up and to learn from other artists and how they sculpt their own lives."

Susan, this nexus between self and other...private and public...is so rich a boundary. I look forward to hearing how you explore it and what materials you gain from it as you continue to sculpt your life and art.

Janet Riehl
www.riehlife.com