Forging its Own Future
Dedicated metalsmiths help a Memphis museum revive a lost American art form
- By Matt Dellinger
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2006, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Every October, the museum sponsors a kind of metalworking orgy called Repair Days. A hundred or so metal artists from around the country volunteer for three days to fix whatever anybody brings in—antique earrings, candelabras, dysfunctional door hinges, bed frames, dented steamer trunks. “Anything but cats, cars and broken hearts,” is the museum’s motto. Or, as Wallace puts it, “from absolute trash to a Paul Revere chocolate pitcher.” Repair fees go to the museum; the artists get venison stew and beer.
At last year’s Repair Days, Rick Smith, head of the blacksmithing program at Southern Illinois University, fashioned a new antler out of casting wax for a pot-metal deer. Nearby, Medwedeff melted the end of a pen-size rod with a blowtorch, then applied its molten tip to the broken edges of a metal mare’s leg like Crazy Glue. A Kansas University teaching assistant looked on as undergraduate Amelia Fader repaired a wedding ring. “‘Just fix it like it’s for your mother, not the pope,’” Fader says she was advised.
As the museum has grown—it now gets some 30,000 visitors annually—so too has the art of decorative metalworking. Demand for it declined during the Great Depression and World War II, when money and metal were scarce, and again during the rise of Modernism, which emphasized clean, unadorned style. But it rebounded in the 1970s when Southern Illinois established a blacksmithing degree program and a major metalworking text was published, the first in decades. In 1974 the Artists’ Blacksmith Association of North America listed 150 members; today it has more than 4,000.
Younger smiths see themselves more as artists than artisans, but the museum embraces both. “It’s all metal,” says Wallace. “You use the same principles. We speak the same language at the core level.”
He is working on converting the last dilapidated building on the grounds into a library for metalworking sources. He says that once it opens next year, he’ll retire in Arkansas, where he’ll spend “more time standing in front of an anvil and less running things.” Not that he has regrets. “Metalwork needed to have one place to call home,” he says, “and this is the place.”
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Comments (1)
I have an old metal bed that got a deep scrap from moving is this fixable?
Posted by Marilyn Stephens on January 12,2009 | 09:33 AM