Thursday, April 17, 2008

I and the Bird #73


New edition of I and the Bird available at A Snail's Eye View!

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Interview with Steven Valleau, Bird Carver


Steven Valleau has got it made. He's a master wood-carver, and he gets to pursue his passion of bird carving as the Carver-In-Residence at the Wendell Gilley Museum. He get to share his skill with the local population. Finally, and perhaps best of all, he gets to spend a lot of time in Southwest Harbor, Maine.

Last week I spoke to the Executive Director and Curator of the Wendell Gilley Museum, Nina Gormley, about the history and current state of bird carving. This week I talked with Steven Valleau about the finer points of carving birds: what birds make good subjects, how to choose your tools and, yes, his driveway.

What drew you to carving birds over other subjects?

SV: I started making bird images in the form of colored pencil drawings when I was about 10 years old. That’s forty years ago now. I had always been interested in drawing since I could hold a pencil. My father Dr. William G. Valleau was a Zoology professor at the University of Maine so I had access to pictures and information about animal life. The first big piece that I remember was a huge piece of paper covered with dinosaurs probably done in pencil and crayon.

As we now know my drawings and the actual beasts evolved into birds. I really began focusing on birds when my uncle Jack Hartleb who was stationed at Dow Air Force Base in Bangor began taking me birding during his weekends off in about 1967. It seems funny now but much of the time we just drove around in his big old barge of an Oldsmobile and would look and occasionally listen for birds. We often drove through the Bangor (Caribou) bog, drove by the Bangor Pool in the Penobscot checking for ducks and eagles. Once someone got credit for a flock of golden Plover at a farm pond that was where Home Depot is now that my Uncle was the first to spot.

I could elaborate on birding in the Bangor area in the late sixties but I’ll spare you. During the years he was in Bangor before being shipped out along with all the B52s to Thailand my uncle Jack and my father started to carve some duck decoys. My father had a student, Don Mares who had some success with a Black Duck decoy at the Sports Show competition at the Bangor Auditorium so they started some duck heads that never got bodies. So my first bird carving is a Black duck body with a head that my uncle carved. I never got his permission to do that. A bit late now.

From my conversation with Nina Gormley, it seems that your development mirrored the general development of bird carving: duck decoys into artistic pieces. How long did it take for you to start carving other species?

SV: Those initial carvings of duck heads for the most part were very crude. My Uncle Jack’s black duck head was quite good which is why I procured it but the ones I did were pretty bad. At first my only tool was a 3 inch diameter sanding drum on a drill press and the wood was just 2x4 ends left over from my parents’ new house. It was probably around 1970, when I was old enough to cut blanks out on the band saw, that I started carving owls, wrens and chickadees. The first non duck I carved was a saw whet owl.

Along with a change in tools my uncle and father found out that Basswood was the wood you wanted for carving birds. The construction lumber that we had been using was just about the worst wood for ease of carving. One nice thing about carving decoys is that the challenge of making feet is avoided. I tried many methods of making metal feet including casting them in lead and using twisted wire. Making a carving with legs is of course the only way give full expression to a representation of a bird. At this point I spend at least as much consideration if not time on the habitat that grounds the bird as on the bird itself. Carving a decoy is like a vacation from work.

So do the idea for your carvings start from the habitat up or start from a particular species and work down?

SV: We start from a particular species although for a particular bird blank the perch has to be reflected in the design of the individual bird because it's body has to actually perch on the base. One leg may have to be forward of the other or the body may have to be tilted for the bird's center of gravity to located where it would be in a natural pose. So we start by choosing a species to carve and assembling as much reference material as we can get our hands on. I maintain a couple photos files, one for myself, one for the museum, which consists largely of photos from magazines but also postcards, cards, newspaper clippings and photo prints.

Wendell Gilley also did this as well as making his own taxidermy collection of bird mounts. Over the course of fifty years Wendell Gilley put together a collection of most North American ducks and owls and many other bird groups. We still use this collection at the museum. I teach bird carving classes and I would say the biggest downfall in my students involves not looking at reference material. How can you carve something without knowing what it looks like? I suppose a person has to learn how to interpret photos. A given photo may not be of a bird in the desired pose but it may show an actual crease between feather groups that in a head on shot only looked like a difference in feather coloring.

When I design a bird if I don't have a particular habitat or bird in mind I at least know that the landing place can accommodate the bird or birds I've designed . The habitat has to be big enough for a flock if that's what's called for. That's why I sometimes make models before committing to a design to be put into wood. I can 'sketch' out a bird very quickly in floral foam and get a rough idea of whether it will physically fit on a branch or if really looks the way I imagined or if it can look better in some other place.

Right now I'm working on a tangle of bittersweet that was only intended for a pair of chestnut-sided warblers that is part of a collection of warbler pairs that I'm making for the Wendell Gilley Museum but I have reference photo of an immature yellowthroat that may end up scolding them from one side of that vine. Sometimes the habitat does suggest the species of bird.

So once you've got a firm idea and know that it will work out (fit on the branch, etc), what's the first step of actually carving the piece?

SV: After I had the designs for the piece drawn I transfer them to a piece of usually basswood and cut them out on a band saw. Most carvings are two pieces of wood: one piece for the head and one for the body, as in a decoy. This is sometimes because of the size of the piece but usually because we want to use the wood’s grain direction to add strength to fragile extremities like bills and necks.

So the more fragile extremities (herons, sandpipers etc) the more difficult the sculpture? Which species are harder to carve than others?

SV: A bird at rest is relatively easy to carve. Birds are very aerodynamically formed creatures so their parts naturally flow into each other. They are somewhat less articulated than mammals. Think of a chimney swift or penguin vs. a race horse or a cello player. I consider fish even easier to carve because they are even more highly evolved to be aerodynamic. This is not to say that it doesn’t take just as much skill to shape a fish well but the nature of the possible poses is less complex. It isn’t so much the fragile nature of the bill that makes a heron more difficult but that the neck is a significant form that you just don’t have to deal with in humming bird.

There are two basic approaches to carving. The first, perhaps more pure one is a form of subtractive sculpture, in that no pieces are added to the original single block of wood. These blocks are usually of highly figured wood and are unpainted to show the beautiful patterns created in woods’ growth. In these sculptures if part of the bird is fragile it must simply be carved and handled very carefully. Truth be told, repairs are made if only because clients are clumsier than creators. (Remember hiding repairs is also an art.) Charles ‘Chippy’ Chase (deceased) of Brunswick, Maine and John T. Sharp of Kent, Ohio are probably the most well know natural wood bird sculptors. Chippy used the term subtractive sculpture to describe what he did but he really thought the word sculpting means taking away so that ‘sculpture’ was description enough.

The second approach to carving is what Chippy called assembling. I prefer additive sculpture, I suppose, but modeling might describe it better. Modeling is what one does with clay because they are no limits to changes one can make. Unlike clay, wood has grain and lines of fracture and since our carvings are intended to be painted anyway we put together pieces of wood in a way that enhances the final product’s strength and/or ease of carving. The woods of choice, Basswood and Tupelo are homogenous, devoid of the figure sought by subtractive sculptors because this makes for easier carving and painting. The use of separate pieces of wood can be extreme. In the early eighties the state of the art was to cave hundreds of feathers separately and attach them to the body form. This thankfully was just a phase.

This brings up another aspect of birds that makes them somewhat unique as a subject. Once you pluck ‘em they all look like a chicken. Their legs and beaks may vary but with the exception of penguins and maybe kiwis anything from an eagle to a titmouse isn’t very different. Their shape is all in their feathers. Of course their feathers can be extremely different from species to species even within a species or an individual for that matter. The flat nature of their feathers, and the fact that the texture of feathers can be easily reproduced by woodburning or grinding, has allowed the extreme realism approached by the best bird carvers. The same is true of fish but not most mammals. I understand even computer animators have a hard time with hair and fur.

To answer the second part of the question, some birds I wouldn’t even attempt to carve. Birds with long plumes like peacock or even a rooster with raised hackles is beyond what I want to attempt. Of course painting is more difficult than carving. I find the colors in a blue jay very hard to get right and the vermiculating on a mallard can take days.

What tools do you use to carve your birds?

SV: The tools I use to shape a carving start with a band saw which is a large shop tool. My band saw is capable of cutting curved edges on wood with sectional dimensions as large as 14” x12”. That’ a big piece of wood, larger than anything one is likely to find in this area. The band saw is also capable of cutting out blocks as small as hummingbirds so it is a very versatile tool.

The first shaping is laid out using a plan view and a profile view that are drawn using various reference materials. Some carvers continue roughing and shaping the blank using nothing but power rotary tools. These tools are familiar to most people as Dremel tools which is a hobbyist brand of the professional Foredom rotary tools that most serious carvers use. If time permits I prefer to use hand tools because one reason I enjoy carving is the sensation experienced in pushing a sharp blade through wood. For large pieces I use draw knives, spoke shaves and large chisels.

The carving tool that I use more than any other is a small knife with a 11/2” blade that has a razor sharp replaceable blade. This knife is one of several models made by Warren Cutlery Company in Rhinebeck New York. The final texturing of the carving is done with a piece of sandpaper, a wood burner or a small rotary tool. Textured carvings are almost always painted so the next step is sealing or priming the surface in preparation for paint.

If a novice wanted to start carving birds would they need these same tools or could they start with something simpler?

SV: A novice carver can buy blanks already cut out from various suppliers such as sugarpinewoodcarving.com. We sell blanks at the museum and I will do custom cutting up to a point. I’ve had people want so many blanks that t I can’t supply their needs and those of my classes. Adult education programs often offer wood shop classes that offer instruction and access to a band saw and other large shop tools. You can also buy basswood blanks on eBay and for a knife use an X-acto knife. That’s probably the simplest way to go. Patterns are available from several sources including mdiwoodcarvers.com which is where I get most of my supplies.

Do you have a favorite bird carving of all the ones you've done?

SV: I don’t really have a favorite carving but there are commissions that stand out as most memorable or satisfying. I made a life sized Osprey th for a man with a house in the Bahamas about 15 years ago. Because of the combination of the species, a new level of price, a certain level of challenge and my personal feelings about the client, that commission was particularly satisfying.

I paid for the driveway of my first house with the money from that bird so it had a lasting significance beyond daily living expenses. The osprey had to be shipped by air to the Bahamas so I spent 20 hours plus making the foam lined plywood crate. Probably most importantly, I really liked the man for whom who I made this carving. I made many carvings for him including at times when one or the other of us were going through hard times. Although bird carving is a job for me the friendships I’ve made over the years seem dearer than the pieces themselves.

What a great story. It must be very satisfying to create a life for yourself based on your artwork. OK one last question: If time and money were no option, and you had a gigantic block of wood, what would you carve?

SV: I am working on a collection for the museum of all the species of warblers, male and female, that breed here on Mount Desert Island. Life has intervened and I have only done seven of those forty individual birds. Once that project is done, I’d like to make a flock of sea ducks floating amongst a series of granite waves. You said unlimited. ΓΈ

Friday, April 4, 2008

Red-Tailed Hawk Attacks Girl at Fenway Park


The media up here in New England is all atwitter about a red-tailed hawk nesting at Boston's Fenway Park that attacked a young girl named Alexa Rodriguez (which is close to Red Sox arch enemy Alex Rodriguez which, according to newspapermen = HILARITY). The girl was scratched but unhurt.

While I am sad that the inevitable friendship between the hawk and Manny Ramirez did not have a chance to develop, I'm glad that the nest and the egg were removed from the stadium. It wouldn't have ended well.

Red Sox Hawk

Thursday, April 3, 2008

I and the Bird #72


Hooray! New edition of I and the Bird available at Ecobirder.

Coming soon: Interview with professional bird-carver Steven Valleau.

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Interview with Nina Gormley of the Wendell Gilley Museum


The Wendell Gilley Museum in Southwest Harbor, Maine is the finest of the few museums dedicated to the art of bird carving. Originally begun as a collection of the works of it's namesake, a native of Southwest Harbor and one of the pioneers of American bird carving, the museum has expanded to include the works of other artists and offers workshops taught by their carver-in-residence.

I talked with Nina Gormley, the Executive Director and Curator of the museum, about Wendell Gilley and the world of bird carving.

Gilley Wood Duck Carvings

How did the Wendell Gilley Museum start?

NG: Wendell Gilley’s wife, Addie, collected 110 examples of her husband’s work from 1931-1981. The couple had thought of starting a museum on their own eventually, but realized that they were no longer up to even the 100+ visitors that came to the home/ workshop with no advertising. Happily, many other people felt that a museum should be established to ensure that future generations could enjoy Wendell’s unique cultural legacy.

In 1979, Steven Rockefeller spearheaded efforts to incorporate the Wendell Gilley Museum, set up a board and raise funds to build it. The Museum purchased the Gilley’s collection as the core of its permanent collection. Roc Caivano was chosen as the architect and engaged to design a building that would not only showcase the bird carvings and other art exhibitions, but serve as a model of energy efficiency and environmental awareness.

Most of the crew that built the Museum had worked with Wendell Gilley when he was a plumber. He was well-liked and respected and their workmanship on the building reflects their admiration. The building opened to the public in July of 1981 and the Museum has been welcoming visitors to discover art through nature and vice versa ever since.

What drew Wendell Gilley to start carving birds over other subjects?

NG: He had a passion for bird hunting. His Yankee spirit made him feel badly about using only the meat and tossing the skins, so he took up taxidermy to learn how to “stuff them and save them.” When he went to the Boston Museum of Natural History in 1931 to look at the taxidermy exhibits, he was drawn to a display of miniature bird carvings by Elmer Crowell. When he got home, he whittle out a little mallard drake, enjoyed it and the rest is history. His taxidermy mounts became his models.

Aside from Mr. Gilley, who are some other famous names in the world of bird carving - past and present?

NG: Besides Wendell Gilley’s inspiration, A. Elmer Crowell, the first bird carving pioneers that spring to my mind are Charles “Shang” Wheeler, Lem and Steve Ward, Arnold Melbye, Grainger McKoy, Ernest Muehlmatt, Harold Haertel, and Bruce Burk.

There are so many styles and so many great carvers these days, it’s tough to give a short list, but my favorite contemporary carvers known on the competitive scene are Larry Barth and John T. Sharp and Todd Wohlt. He does not enter competitions, but the Gilley Museum’s Carver-in-Residence, Steven Valleau, is on my short-list for his outstanding, graceful work and his enduring patience with students of all ages.

Do most bird carvers work toward realistic depiction of their subjects or are there different styles as in painting?

NG: There are many different styles. Some carvers, for example, do not even use paint, such as John T. Sharp, whose “interpretive” style depicts birds (and other subjects) in hardwoods such as black walnut with an oil finish. The grain of the wood is integral to the design.

Speaking of such carvers, I neglected to mention John’s mentor and one of the foremost early interpretive style carvers, Maine’s own Charles “Chippy” Greenough Chase. Among the carvers who paint their subjects, some create “smoothies” in which all the detail is painted on, others carve, burn and/or stone in texture to their pieces before painting. Some go for a more “folk art” look, others strive to make the birds look as if they will take off any minute.

Are certain styles more desirable to collectors than others?

NG: If price is a measurement of “desirable,” classic antique decoys still rule the market, some fetching prices in excess of $800,000, but there are collectors for every style – and price range of carvings.

$800,000! What kind of decoy was that? What place to duck decoys have in the history of bird carving?

NG: A black-bellied plover by A. Elmer Crowell went for $830,000; there may have been higher prices since that 2006 sale. Decoys makers turned to decorative carving when conservation laws banned market gunning in 1918 and cut down on the need for working birds.



Because of the decoy connection, are ducks and shorebirds still the most commonly carved birds? Do collectors prefer some species to others?

NG: Ducks and shorebirds, i.e. the birds decoy makers and hunters were most familiar with started out as the most commonly-carved birds and still appear to have an edge, but others, including exotic species are catching up as carvers diversify and the collecting world fills with birders as well as hunters. Collectors tend to favor game birds and good-looking birds. A carver can be sure to sell more loons than vultures.

Not a huge market for vulture sculptures, eh? Makes sense. Are some of these uglier birds gaining any more respect as the ranks of birders, as opposed to hunters, rise? Are there other ramifications from the recent growth of birding?

NG: Perhaps birds that are both rare and “ugly” are gaining respect with the increased interest in birding. I have seen the combination of birders who like to travel, who see something “special,” a quetzal, for example, then look for a carving or commission one to savor the memory.

Back to Wendell Gilley, did he focus on carving the birds he hunted or did he experiment with other species? Did he have a favorite subject?

NG: Wendell’s favorites were the birds he had the most first-hand experience with—those he hunted, and Maine’s ever-present State bird, the black-capped chickadee. If you pick up a Gilley green-winged teal or a ruffed grouse, you almost feel it’s alive; it’s obvious that Wendell handled those, whereas his Adele penguin leaves something to be desired.

What do you see for the future of the Wendell Gilley Museum, and for bird-carving in general?

NG: Wendell Gilley believed that all people have some form of “creative power” that they simply need to find the outlet for. Here at the Museum and elsewhere, more and more people of all ages are finding that bird carving is a great outlet for that power and also a great way to connect with nature. We will do our best here to keep fostering the connection between humans, art and nature.

After you have carved and painted a Blackburnian Warbler you will never fail to recognize a real one in the field. I believe that bird carving and collecting is going to continue to grow and diversify. Whether you carve ornaments for your family or commissions for celebrities, whether you buy $12.00 carved chickadees or $830,000 decoys, there is a place for everyone in the bird carving continuum.

About Us | Site Map | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Blog Design | 2007 Company Name