Upright Carry (2019)

A few years ago at our gym, there was a special seminar for pregnant athletes doing CrossFit. They were taught how to train and coach safely during pregnancy and after delivery. Well, they trained well into late stages of pregnancy with modifications to movement and intensity and we cheered them on. After delivery, their training resumed, albeit very limited at first but as time passed, they regained their capabilities and before you knew it they were back better than ever.

I watched this process with interest as I knew a sculpture of a pregnant athlete would be very special. I always regretted not making a sculpture of my wife while she was pregnant; alas, I wasn’t active in art at the time. But when the top female athlete of our gym was 8 months pregnant I knew I couldn’t miss the chance.

When I sat down with Sacha to hear some of her story I got the full discourse on what it takes to be a high level competitive athlete. It wasn’t just the volume of training that surprised me but how much of her life had to be planned and organized towards a singular goal. Every workout programmed, every meal planned, protein weighed, gym clothes at the ready twice a day. A decade of her life like that; oh yeah plus a partner and a day job, no, a career to manage.

Then, there was the defined musculature that she walked around with. If she went out with a tank top; the stares were one thing but perfect strangers would walk up to touch her triceps or abs. To this day, a strong woman is still a visual anomaly and treated differently.

Raw emotion and effort from Sacha during a CrossFit competition (credit: RxComps Instagram)

The pose we started with was a lunge with a weighted ball overhead. Something about the ball and the belly together looked symbolically interesting. I made a small model but abandoned it because I didn’t like the scale of it. I wanted to continue to go larger and more impressive in scale.

Sacha posing at 38 weeks pregnant for a quick clay sketch – a beach ball subbed in for the weighted ball at this point.

I as I had suspected, this really was a special project. I felt connected to a miraculous moment through this artwork. I also noticed something different about Sacha, while all my other models took a very serious focused facial expression while posing, Sacha had a calm relaxed smile the whole time. I observed a pure lack of self-consciousness and her being in the moment.

I modified the pose so that it would only from around the belly button up and planned it for 23″ tall. I was nearly done modelling before the COVID pandemic broke out and I took a 5 month sculpting hiatus as my sculpture studio closed. I took the time at home to make Origami and finished Turbulent Journey during that time.

When things opened up again in the fall, I went back to the studio eager to quickly finish the sculpture and start mold-making but all the details, face, hands, hair… I spent an extra two weeks finishing up the sculpture.

This was going to be the biggest mold I had ever made and I decided to go for a single mold instead of molding it in pieces. I also wanted a higher quality mold with better registration so the parting line wouldn’t be as visible. I think a simple mold would have taken about 8 sessions at the studio, this one took about 15. The extra steps were required to have full control of the parting line in the silicone – this is where the two halves open up, where leaks happen, misalignment occurs and I wanted to eliminate those problems as much as possible. I show few images below, I didn’t catch every step but hopefully it provides an idea of the process.

I made a test casting in HydroCal (plaster) and then a second in Hydrostone, a much harder gypsum cement. I was pleased with the casting which required only very minor repairs. After casting of course, was the surface finishing to get the rusted iron look. Maybe more on that later. Next will be a resin/iron casting and then who knows, I’m thinking a wax casting for… BRONZE?! Let’s see 🙂

Pop Up 2020

With so many art shows being postponed this year, artists have been creative in finding ways to exhibit their work. In my case, I’ve teamed up with wildlife and animal artist Brittany Lauren to put on our own show at the The Pop Up Shoppe Stouffville. It will be socially distanced with no grand reception or celebration, but we are happy at the opportunity to share our work and passion. Hope you can find the time to drop by. Opportunity to commission a custom origami piece or animal portrait! It’s my first show so counting on you to spread the word!


6397 Main Street Stouffville.

November 23-29
M-W 10am – 4pm
Th 2pm – 8 pm
Fri 10am – 6pm
Sat 10am – 6pm
Sun 10am – 4pm

Finding Balance (2019)

Sculpture of female athlete holding a handstand pose

21″ x 10.5″ x 16″ Cold cast iron with iron oxide patina

Sculpture of female athlete holding a handstand pose
Finding Balance (2019) 21″ Cold Cast Iron – 2nd Casting

The second sculpture in my Strong Woman series is of Jenn Lymburner who teaches gymnastic movements at my CrossFit gym and owns her own business J2N , training ordinary people to become the best versions of themselves. I was a bit weary at first of sculpting a petite, well-defined woman with a visible 8-pack as I thought I’d be idealizing an impossible standard for women. Sure enough, that physique came from decades of training in competitive gymnastics, power tumbling, cheerleading and CrossFit. But I think the Strong Woman theme is not about a new ideal, but about acceptance of a choice and passion previously less taken.

Side view of a sculpture of CrossFit athlete Jenn Lymburner holding a handstand pose
15 lb sculpture delicately balanced

During our discussion on which pose to select, in the back of my mind, I knew I wanted this handstand pose that she had from her Instagram account. However, it is a difficult one for any model to hold and somewhat risky from a structural perspective at this scale. However, the pose looked so compelling we had to try it out. Jenn was amazing, able to hold it for up to 2 minutes at a time allowing me to take my reference photos. We met a few times as I was working on the sculpture for some live comparisons and she held an inverted pose more than a dozen times, sometimes in a headstand, sometimes in a handstand. I was worried she would pass out but she showed what a truly amazing athlete she is.

Aggressive iron oxide patina

In this second casting I applied the aggressive iron oxide patina I developed while working on Shouldering the Burden. I’ve selected iron for this series because it is a material which can be purified to such great strength and gleaming beauty but is subject to aging and weathering. It comes from the the earth and returns to the earth through oxidation and reflects our temporal existence.

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