Rae Atira-Soncea's memorial Blog Rae's Blog

September 29, 2009

Earth Cauldron

Filed under: Cauldrons,Rae's Art — Tags: , — math @ 8:47 pm

Happy Autumn!

Earth Cauldron

Earth Cauldron

Available! $1000

Turning from Brooms for a while, I’d like to present one of Rae’s Cauldrons.  She did 3 while at the UW, with access to the foundry there.  The theme was the elements, and she did Fire, Water, and Earth.  This one is the Earth.  The outside is a globe, with the continents in relief.  Visible in this picture are North Africa and Europe., with one of the loops intended for a ring handle that was never installed.

All 3 cauldrons were created using the”lost wax” method.  To get the basic shape, Rae started with a beach ball.  She had an old deep-fryer, looked like a toaster with juse one very large slot.  Into this were placed hunks of foundry wax, a brown, sticky substance that dries not quite as hard or brittle as paraffin.  It can be carved with clay tools, and layers built up with melted wax in a variety of ways.  Rae used the pot of just-barely melted wax, butter knives and palette knives, and brushes.    To make the cauldron shape, she brushed layer after layer of wax onto the beach ball, 3/4 of the way up, letting it cool before adding another coat.  For the Earth Cauldron, the entire orb was fairly thin, about 1/4″.

I printed out some maps of the continents, we cut them out, and laid the patterns on a 3/8″ thick slab of foundry wax, then cut through the wax to get little pancakes of each.  These were transferred to the surface of the orb, warmed almost to melting to make them flexible, stuck by heating a thin pallette knife over an alcohol flame.  The beach ball was deflated, the top edge folded over and formed into a lip

This piece also features snakes.  Snakes had special significance to Rae.  They stood for Wisdom and knowledge.  Rather than try to carve snakes from scratch, she bought

Interior Earth Cauldron

Interior Earth Cauldron

some rubber snakes from a toy store.  Since they were burnable material, they were incorporated directly into this piece.  (I’ll describe how the Fire Cauldron’s feet were made later)  One was curled up on the bottom, and is very seldom seen, since you have to tip the cauldron over.  The others are inside, one on the inside surface of the globe, the other curling around the other feature inside the cauldron, the House.

The house is modeled after the quilt pattern called “schoolhouse”.  Again, a sheet of wax (molten wax poured into a lined cookie sheet) was cut into the 4 sides, roof, and then 2 “smokestacks”, complete with windows and doors.  Assembled and placed in the bottom of the cauldron, and then another snake out a window, curled around and into the door.  The house had a lot of significance to Rae, representing home, a sanctuary usually, but the snake moving in and out represented the invasion of that sanctuary, a reference to some unpleasant childhood memories.

Earth Cauldron inside

Earth Cauldron inside

Once the piece was complete, more wax was added as “sprues”, for the bronze to pour into the mold, nd to allow venting of gasses when everything melted.  The entire piece was suspended in a cylindrical cardboard tube, and plaster poured into and around it.  When that hardened, what was left showing was a 3″ circle of wax and a couple of small ones for vents.  The entire thing was placed into a burn-out oven for a couple of days, where all the wax was evaporated, along with the snakes and a few plastic straws, etc.

While that was still hot, the bronze was melted into a crucible, and some heat-suit wearing art students working on the semester’s projects poured it into the waiting molds, while others stood by with shovels and gloves.  The molds were placed in black foundry earth, a slightly sticky mix of sand, dirt, waste oil, and other stuff, if my memory serves me.

There was a problem.  A crack had appeared in the mold, and the molten liquid found it and widened it, and out the side of the mold appeared flames and smoke.  Rushing in with shovels, dirt was piled against the side and held in place with shovels, which turned red with the heat. As more bronze was poured in, more flowed out till George (the Instructor) said enough!

When it had cooled enough to open up, the cauldron had a large, irregular fan of bronze coming off the side, and several places wehre the bronze had not completely filled in the thinner areas, because it had cooled too qucily spreading into them.  Thus the round-edged gaps in the oceans visible in the photos.  The effect was unexpected, unplanned, but not unpleasant.

Then began the long process of cleaning up the cauldron.  The sprues had to be cut off, as well as the excess bronze that had leaked out.  A sawzall and angle-grinder did most of the work.  Hours and many blades, several grinding disks, then sand paper.  The result was a shiny, golden miracle.  Then the patina.

Rae read about, and experimented with, several types of patinas  (finishes) for the bronze.  For the Earth cauldron, she selected a fired milk/mud application.  The cauldron was taken to a friends farm, a pit dug, a fire mad, and the cauldron put into the coals.  dirt was mixed with milk and poured into the cauldron, and the pit, and the cauldron lowered into the hole and covered with more dirt, more milk.  Interesting smell.

The result is a deep brown with darker spots, and a semi-gloss finish.  So it remains to date.

September 23, 2009

Celtic Totem

Filed under: Brooms,Her Art,Rae's Art — Tags: , , , — math @ 8:37 pm

OK, so one more Broom, then perhaps I’ll turn to some of Rae’s other  themes, especially if I start getting more feedback.  Any requests?  Cabinets, Cauldrons, Mirrors, Weavings, Copper Electroforms?  Eventually I’ll get them all.

Celtic Totem

Celtic Totem

The Celtic Totem, I think, was the first piece Rae did in Basswood.   She also used broomcorn that we grew in our garden plot at Eagle heights.  (The poor raccoons, who usually got most of the sweetcorn folks planted there, were so confused, it just kept growing taller, and never had any ears to steal!)

It was the most complex carving she did to that date, too, because it was to tell a story.  One that she related many times, unlike most of her other pieces, where if she told the story, it was to an individual or small group, and seldom repeated.

The story is a retelling of one she heard as a child, from her Irish ancestry.  As I recall it:

“Long ago, Ireland was a cold and rock island.  The cold, the poor soil, and the weather made it hard to live there.  The women cried because their children went hungry.  “

Base to Celtic Totem

Base to Celtic Totem

The base, with the homegrown broomcorn, carved to represent a rocky, mountainous island.

“Their tears fell through cracks in the earth and woke a Dragon sleeping there, who then heard their cries.   Out of compassion, she used her fiery breath to warm the land from beneath, making the island lush and green.”

“The women learned the power in their bodies,  had many children, and learned from the island.  They learned to grow food, to raise families.  They grew numerous.dragon-woman

From the wolf, they learned about community, about sharing and protecting each other.  And so they lived their lives well till they died, when the Raven took their souls back to the Earth.”

Celtic Totem top

Celtic Totem top

The broom “stick” is one large piece of basswood.  Rae drew the design on a large strip of paper, transfered it using carbon paper t the front, then flipped both wood and paper to do the same on the back, (just the outline), then sketched in the things that would be viewed on the back.  on each side she did similar sketches, then started removing large chunks of wood.

The carving process

The carving process

At some point, I remember coming up with the idea to mount the piece vertically, so we created a set of braces with “lazy-susan” bearings, and used a small pneumatic jack to tighten the whole thing up against a ceiling joist in the garage.

totem_carving

Rae was very proud of this piece.  She liked her Irish heritage, the symbols all had special power for her, and she wanted to do a Sheela-na-gig ever since she first came on them in her research.  A review of her show by a reporter from a Madison newspaper, I think, called it a “broom for a god”.

September 8, 2009

Hecate’s Sickle

Filed under: Rae's Art — Tags: , , — math @ 8:12 pm

In the collection of Helen Klebesadel

The second piece I’d like to present is this broom, also from her Sweeping Changes show. It is in the collection of Helen Klebesadel. (click on images for larger size)

Hecate's Sickle in Sweeping Changes Show

Hecate’s Sickle in Sweeping Changes Show

This broom is a tribute to the Greek Goddess Hecate, whom Rae honored as a goddess of both birth and death, beginnings and endings.  This piece concentrates on the endings part.  The top of the piece is the namesake, a sickle, a tool o9f reaping, or the harvest, symbolic of the ending of life, so that a new life can begin from the bounty of the old.

The stick is a single ironwood sapling, including one broad buttress root, the whole thing turned upside down, with the root making a right-angle.  An actual iron sickle blade is inserted into this, and the wood carved in the shape of a raven’s head, holding a silver fish.  Both Raven and Salmon are Celtic totem animals, and played a part in Rae’s personal pantheon.  Here it is before and after:

sickle_headhecate_top

The skirt is a combination of Red Osier Dogwood, Apple, willow, and dogwood twigs, some paineed black, with black string binding them to the stick, and a few black feathers mixed in.  The whole thing is almost 7 feet high, on a short pedestal, and 34″ in diameter.

hecate_detail

Rae installing Sweeping Changes, Hecate's Sickle in foreground

Rae installing Sweeping Changes, Hecate’s Sickle in foreground

And finally, from Rae’s “Besom rant”:

“The broom is used as a means to guide or confound souls, friends, enemies, and luck.  The Hecate Priestesses of the Ancient World cared for both birthing and dying, they supposedly had a ritual of following behind a funeral process from the home to the burial site (or fire) and sweeping the path clear so the soul would be unable to read its trail home and haunt the family.   However when they arrived for a birth, the duty of the young Priestesses in training was to sweep clear the door step and path so the new soul would arrive unhindered and with their own fate to follow.  Greek and Italian Grandmas or crones can still be found sweeping the streets at night in front of their homes in a ritualistic fashion in older communities.”

 

 

August 29, 2009

Rae’s Art

Filed under: Rae's Art — Tags: , , — math @ 9:07 pm

I (Math) am going to be adding to this blog on a weekly basis, if this works out.  My plan is to each week present one of Rae’s works of Art, and tell some of the back story behind it, some from memory, some from her own words.  Please feel free to add anything you remember about these pieces, if you have seen them before, or comment on them if you have not.

I am going to start with a Broom from her original broom show, one of the first she did, “Egypt Remembered”  First a photo, taken shortly after we moved to Madison, in our kitchen/studio (wherever you have space, you can work).  Click to enlarge.

Rae with first broom

Rae with first broom

Egypt Remembered is now in the collection of Mary and Rob Dumlao, in Chicago.  The broom has a walnut shaft, carved at the top to emulate wheat, with an ankh at the very top, flanked by 2 crescents of oak to symbolize Hathor’s horns.  The “skirt” as Rae called it, is  dark dyed broom corn.

It was in the show Sweeping Changes, inNovember 1990 at the UW-Madison Art Department Gallery.  Here is a pic of that installation, which included 13 brooms:

BROOM-SHOW

Like many of her pieces, this started as a dream, then she sketched it out, found the wood, and started working on it.  I helped her figure out how to attach the “horns” to the walnut, I remember her cutting, rasping, using a spokeshave and chisels.  We had a little fold-up workbench/sawhorse that she clamped the piece to.  I helped do some final sanding, and made a little spool thing to help hold the string as she wound it around the broomcorn.  I still recall the feel of that broom when held, it seemed to pulse with energy.

More pics:

Egypt Remembered in Sweeping Changes show

Egypt Remembered in Sweeping Changes show

Detail of Egypt Remembered

Detail of Egypt Remembered

Detail of Skirt

Detail of Skirt

March 9, 2009

Her national reach

Filed under: Rae — Tags: , — Helen Klebesadel @ 7:25 pm

In the early to mid 1990s Rae served for eight years on the national board of the Women’s Caucus for Art, the nation’s oldest and largest multidisciplinary women’s art organization. During much of that time she was the Vice President in charge of Chapter Development. She put together board and organizational development materials that are still a model of clarity and usability. She and Math also traveled to Philadelphia at no small cost to themselves to the organization’s headquarters to computerize the office and membership database. I have been receiving messages from artists around the country saddened by her loss and I share some of them here.

My heart is heavy yet my spirit flies with her………….she will always be a part of my work. Future Akins, artist, Lubbock, Texas

How sad that someone whose art was so vibrant should die so young. I will never forget how lovely the piece she did for the women’s studies conference exhibit was, or her magical series of brooms. I hope that there will be a major retrospective of her work and a catalogue to document it. I would certainly enjoy owning one and would enjoy teaching students about her work. It makes one reflect on how the work of many important women artists is not sufficiently documented. My condolences go to everyone who has known and loved Rae at this sad moment. Gail Tremblay, artist, poet, and professor, Evergreen State, and past national president of the WCA

Rae Atira-Soncea, woman of heart and woman of art. She was an amazing presence wherever she went. I recall going to the WCA National board meetings and other events and watching Rae share her powerful spirit with all of us. We will miss her. I will miss her. Flo Oy Wong, artist, Sunnydale, California

I didn’t know Rae very well, but I loved her work! This is very sad and a terrible loss. Please accept my condolences. It is wonderful that you are working on a retrospective that was started while Rae was still alive… Susan Noyes Platt, art historian and critic, Seattle, Washington

I’m so sorry to hear about Rae. I have such fond memories of working with her on the board of WCA. Susan Grabel Rappaport, artist, New York City

We have lost Rae. She was a wonderful artist and inspiration to so many. Ruth Waters, sculptor, and Founder & Director at 1870 Art Center, Belmont, CA

Oh, this is the saddest news. What a wonderful, smart and insightful woman. Margaret McDowell, artist, Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas

I am sorry to hear the news about Rae. She was a very fine and powerful artist. I’m glad I got a chance to see the show you had together at the Commonwealth Gallery in Madison. Thanks for letting me know. My sympathy and blessings to her family. You’ll be in my thoughts and prayers. Katherine Rogers, artist, Minneapolis

Thank you so much for letting me know of Rae’s untimely passing. I hope the retrospective and catalog is realized. At least there should be a record of her wonderful work. Jean Towgood, artist, Los Angeles, and past national president of the national WCA

Rae Atira-Soncea had a vibrant personality and generous spirit. She will be
missed. Te acompaño en los sentimientos– my spirit is with you in this very sad
time. Imna Arroyo, artist, professor, Connecticut, and past national president of the WCA.

Very sad news. It reminds me of just how tenuous life can be. Please keep me up to date on the progress of her show and catalog-we all need to remember this very special person–Life is a journey and it is sad that her journey has ended-but the legacy of her work and life will continue on in all of us whose life she touched. Ann Webb, artist, Houston, TX

As I grow older, I am constantly reminded of the brevity of our lives on earth. Rae was a powerful voice. She taught me so much…….and she was there, for us, when we needed her voice. Jo Hockenull, artist, Independence, Oregon

I am so saddened to hear about Rae. A powerful soul has left and her spot will be empty forever. Betsy Damon, artist, New York

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