Patrick Dougherty has been building large scale stick art structures across the country. (photo: Theresa Hogue) |
A Log Home in Chapel Hill
Randy Harris for The New York Times. The sculptor Patrick Dougherty’s home in North Carolina.
PATRICK DOUGHERTY, a sculptor who weaves tree saplings into whirling, animated shapes that resemble tumbleweeds or gusts of wind, likes to say that his first artwork was his house. Built from old barn timber, fallen trees and rocks he dug from the ground here, this rangy log villa started off as a one-room cabin, and is his only permanent work (most of his installations break down after a year or two in the wild).
He was 28, and in the Air Force, working in hospital and health administration, when he bought this 10-acre “farmette,” as he put it, for $10,000. “I had decided I was kind of a log-cabin frontier person,” said Mr. Dougherty, who is now 65, and an ebullient and rapid speaker whose sentences unfurl and coil around one another like vines. “My dream was to build a house. I didn’t realize my real dream, my sub-current, was to become a sculptor.”
At the time, he was also a house-husband, he said, with a young son and a daughter, and was working his way alone through the building process. Fired up by the Foxfire books, the how-to guides for the ’70s-era back-to-the-land movement, he would pore over the pages, practicing dovetails until he was pitch-perfect.
“I didn’t know much about building, and I was intimidated by people that did,” he said. “Also, I wanted to face the problems myself. It was a passage, finding my way through a house and into a life. It was a real quest.”
At 36, he went back to school, straight into the graduate art program at the University of North Carolina, 10 minutes away. His first stick work, a man-size tangle of saplings made on a picnic table at home, startled his professors, he said. They thought “it was too complete for someone who’d been blundering around in the netherworld.”
Since then, he has made well over 200 startling (and delightful) pieces for sites all over the world — woolly lairs and wild follies, gigantic snares, nests and cocoons, some woven into groves of trees, others lashed around buildings. And in August, he was invited by the Brooklyn Botanic Garden to make a piece for its centennial: you’ll find “Natural History,” five winsome wind-blown pods that Mr. Dougherty described as “lairs for feral children or wayward adults,” near the Magnolia Plaza there.
Thirty-eight of these works are collected in “Stickwork,” a monograph-memoir, published last month by Princeton Architectural Press. It’s full of installation tales, like the time he camped in a Japanese temple while working on a piece and was warned by his host about the poisonous but sacred snakes that lurked there. “Don’t kill them,” Mr. Dougherty recalled the host saying. “If one bites you, call my wife and she will take you to the hospital.”
Mr. Dougherty is a very good storyteller. And there is always a story, because each piece takes at least three weeks to make, blooms before a rapt and sometimes fractious audience, and depends on the efforts of a fresh team of volunteers new to stickwork, over which Mr. Dougherty presides like an enthusiastic Outward Bound leader.
“It’s a problem-solving event, and problems arise every day,” he said. “You have to be flexible. I like working with sticks, but it’s really an excuse to have these experiences. One is to be bad and play out some kind of stick thing in a public place, like pulling your pants down, and another is this huge outpouring from people who don’t know you and walk up to you and say, ‘What is this?’ ”
The book chronicles Mr. Dougherty’s stunning output of nine works a year, every year. What it doesn’t reveal are the ways in which Mr. Dougherty and his family cope with his unrelenting schedule, and how a simple house can be a staging ground for a career.
“The cabin is pretty self-sufficient,” he said (taxes are $1,100 a year). “It has stood by me, been my cohort. There’s no rent to pay, and it’s been a good place to come home and store my stuff. It’s also a place to work ideas out. It became central to my imagining my life as a sculptor.”
Certainly the log house is as compelling and artful as one of his sculptures. Ceilings are veneered with sticks laid out in a herringbone pattern. A deer fence is like tough woodland lace. There is a small herd of outbuildings, the sides of which are layered with Mr. Dougherty’s experiments in cladding; one of them looks as if it’s lined with feathers.(...)
By PENELOPE GREEN (Fuente: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/07/garden/07twig.html)
A version of this article appeared in print on October 7, 2010, on page D1 of the New York edition.
A view of sculptor Patrick Dougherty’s handmade log cabin and 10-acre “farmette” in Chapel Hill. Photo: NEW YORK TIMES |
Log Cabin Outhouse by Patrick Dougherty Photo: NEW YORK TIMES |
Photo: NEW YORK TIMES
Photo: NEW YORK TIMES
Photo: NEW YORK TIMES |
Patrick Dougherty. Arquitectura natural
Este branchbender estadounidense es famoso por sus increíbles estructuras ecológicas. Comenzó su trabajo a principios de la década del 80 combinando su amor por la naturaleza con conocimientos de carpintería y botánica; explorando las más primitivas técnicas de construcción, experimentando con ramas y otros materiales provenientes de la tierra y cultivando árboles desde su nacimiento para lograr las figuras más insólitas.
Putting two and two together (2004) Richard Wunsch |
Close Ties (2006) Fin Macrae |
CHAPEL HILL, North Carolina – Patrick Dougherty, a sculptor who weaves tree saplings into whirling, animated shapes that resemble tumbleweeds or gusts of wind, likes to say that his first artwork was his house. Built from old barn timber, fallen trees and rocks he dug from the ground here, this rangy log villa started off as a one-room cabin and is his only permanent work (most of his installations break down after a year or two in the wild).
His first stick work, a man-size tangle of saplings made on a picnic table at home, startled his professors, he said. They thought “it was too complete for someone who’d been blundering around in the netherworld.”
Since then, he has made more than 200 pieces for sites all over the world – woolly lairs and wild follies, gigantic snares, nests and cocoons, some woven into groves of trees, others lashed around buildings. And in August, he was invited by the Brooklyn Botanic Garden in New York to make a piece for its centennial: You’ll find “Natural History,” five winsome, wind-blown pods that Dougherty described as “lairs for feral children or wayward adults,” near the Magnolia Plaza there.
Thirty-eight of these works are collected in “Stickwork,” a monograph-memoir, published in September by Princeton Architectural Press. It’s full of installation tales, like the time he camped in a Japanese temple while working on a piece and was warned by his host about the poisonous but sacred snakes there. “Don’t kill them,” Dougherty recalled the host saying. “If one bites you, call my wife and she will take you to the hospital.”
Dougherty is a good storyteller. And there is always a story, because each piece takes at least three weeks to make, blooms before a rapt and sometimes fractious audience, and depends on the efforts of a fresh team of volunteers new to stickwork, over which Dougherty presides like an enthusiastic Outward Bound leader.
“It’s a problem-solving event, and problems arise every day,” he said. “You have to be flexible. I like working with sticks, but it’s really an excuse to have these experiences. One is to be bad and play out some kind of stick thing in a public place, like pulling your pants down, and another is this huge outpouring from people who don’t know you and walk up to you and say, ‘What is this?’ ”
The book chronicles Dougherty’s output of nine works a year, every year. What it doesn’t reveal are the ways in which Dougherty and his family cope with his unrelenting schedule, and how a simple house can be a staging ground for a career.
“The cabin is pretty self-sufficient,” he said (taxes are $1,100 a year). “It has stood by me, been my cohort. There’s no rent to pay, and it’s been a good place to come home and store my stuff. It’s also a place to work ideas out. It became central to my imagining my life as a sculptor.”
Certainly the log house is as compelling and artful as one of his sculptures. Ceilings are veneered with sticks laid out in a herringbone pattern. A deer fence is like tough woodland lace. There is a small herd of outbuildings, the sides of which are layered with Dougherty’s experiments in cladding; one of them looks as if it’s lined with feathers.
Standing in front of the house, you could see the outline of the original one-room cabin, like a child’s drawing sketched onto a proper house.
(Fuente: http://www.compasscayman.com/observer/2010/10/24/Sticks-and-stones-and-art/#comment)
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/07/garden/07twig.html
http://www.compasscayman.com/observer/2010/10/24/Sticks-and-stones-and-art/
http://lloydkahn-ongoing.blogspot.com/2010/10/outhouse-by-sculptor-patrick-dougherty_07.html
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