Birdhouse Factory

Our friends Tom and Jenny Wertz invited us to see a performance of Birdhouse Factory by CirqueWorks at Hancher Auditorium in Iowa City on Friday. We picked them up and had dinner at the Iowa River Power Restaurant then went over to the auditorium. We had great seats; row G, right in the middle.

The performance was a Cirque de Soliel type of thing. The general idea was that the performers were workers in a factory that made bird houses in the 1930’s. There would be general activity on the set with nondescript sort of busy-ness, then one of the performers would be featured doing their specialty. There were about 8 or 10 set pieces altogether. The first was one of the very best. A contortionist from Mongolia whose backbone was so flexible that she could almost touch her boom-boom to the back of her head, writhed around in all sorts of impossible poses, most of the time balanced on one hand. At the end she pretzelled up and supported her whole weight by biting onto a plate at the end of a long stick.

Contortionist

Another impressive act was the guy and the German Wheel. At first he just rolled back and forth across the stage moving around inside the wheel, but as the act progressed he started to roll around on the outside of the wheel. Speeding down towards the floor you thought he was going to be smashed, but at the last minute he would flatten out and miss the floor completely.

07German wheel

There were other great acts as well; an acrobatic tango, vertical dancing on ropes, a rail thin hula hoop artist, twin trapeze artists, and a ballet on a suspended twirling ring. One of the most fun ones was at the end. Three guys were up on a platform goofing around when one of them appears to lose his balance. It’s a setup of course. He bounces on a trampoline and rebounds right back up onto the platform. The others follow suit and soon they are intertwined bouncing left then right between each other all while mugging for the crowd. It was a delight.

Although this is not the performance exactly as we saw it, here is a you-tube video that gives you a pretty good feel for what it was like.

Birdhouse factory

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Viracocha – Grand Opening

Viracocha

Yesterday, Karen, Mom and I drove up to Dubuque for the Grand Opening of this year’s Art on the River exhibition. Viracocha is one of seven sculptures on display. I talked to many people who liked the sculpture and not one told me they didn’t like it. One lady who was on the selection committee told me that it scared some people but all the sculptures were approved unanimously so it can’t have been too bad.

When we intalled it, we had a little discussion about which way it should be situated. I thought it should be turned so that one side was visible when you approached it from the east and the other was visible when you came from the west. The other three thought one side should face the sidewalk square on, ninety degrees opposite of what I had in mind. Since it didn’t matter to me much anyway, I went along with the others. At the opening I decided that I think I should have done it the way I originally thought. The way it is now, the side that faces the sidewalk is almost always in shadow (see the righthand view above). All the pictures they took of it were taken of the “back” side, not that that is any worse than the front. Oh well.

I liked the other sculptures too and had a chance to talk to a couple of the other sculptors. Some of them got away before I could talk to them though and that was a little disappointment.

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Camping with Ben

Karen, Lance, Ben, and Butch Thorpe in camping mode

BenCherise and Rachel went to Kansas City last weekend so Lance, Karen, Ben and I grabbed the opportunity to get a weekend of car camping in. Recently we have been going to the South Lake McBride campground which they consider primative. We got there in the early afternoon and got set up.

I had a reception to go to for a friend, Dennis Patton, who had come back to town for a while. So I left at about 6:00. By the time the party was over, all the others had gone to bed and said that I might as well stay at home and drive out early in the morning. Sounded good to me.

They were supposed to call me when they got up but didn’t do so. They were up about 5:30. Bless Ben’s dear little heart. I woke up at 6:30 and was on my way by quarter till. I got there in time for breakfast. Lance made himself and Karen one of his gourmet omelets but I got what I wanted, the left over beef stew that I missed out on the night before.

We didn’t stay too much longer and we were on our way home by a little after 10:00. When we got home, I found myself in need of a nap.

Typical camp scene

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Movie Reviews – September 2007

Here is what we saw:

Title Made Saw Rating
Stardust 2007 9/02/07 3
Night Watch 2005 9/02/07 2
Black Dahlia 2006 9/06/07 2
The Illusionist 2006 9/11/07 4
Lady in the Water 2006 9/14/07 3
Flyboys 2006 9/19/07 3
The Secret Agent 1996 9/27/07 3

Here are my reviews:

Stardust

A young man eludes the guard of the magical wall and enters a secret kingdom. He falls in love with a bewitched princess and returns home on the normal side of the wall. Nine months later a baby is left with the wall guardian and is given to the young man. Twenty years after that, the baby has an adventure of his own. When he sees a falling star he tells the girl he is in love with that he will bring it to her. It’s on the other side of the wall of course. The falling star is actually a beautiful girl who many characters are seeking; a witch, the princes vying for the throne, and our hero. The witch wants to sacrifice her to regain her youth. The princes want her because she is the key to becoming the king, and our hero wants her to fulfill his promise to his beloved. Our hero finds her and they set out on the long quest. They have many adventures including a time with a transvestite pirate who teaches our hero to sword fight. The pirates are a hoot. The princes are trying to kill each other off one by one and the last one standing will be king. As they die off they join their deceased brothers in a ghostly Greek chorus and the ghosts are a hoot too. Each ghost bears the scars of the way he died. Our hero eventually wins, no surprise here, and falls in love with the falling star/love interest. The closest thing you can compare this movie to is Princess Bride. Ebert said it did not come up to that level but I thought it was better. I almost gave this 4 stars.
Theater – 3 stars

Night Watch

In modern day Russia the centuries old battle between good and evil is going on. The side of darkness all seem to be vampires and both sides are looking for a young boy who is some sort of key. This is the first of a trilogy which I will not be following through with. The dubbing into English is pretty good so it is surprising when anything written is shown because it is all in cyrillic. Don’t bother with this one.
Netflix – 2 stars

Black Dahlia

This movie documents the real life investigation of the Black Dahlia Hollywood murder. With stars like Hilary Swank and Scarlett Johansson this ought to have been great. It was a plodding, confusing muddle. Don’t bother with this one either.
Netflix – 2 stars

The Illusionist

In nineteenth century Europe, a poor boy has a chance encounter with a magician and dedicates his life to the profession. He befriends a girl who one day will become the fiance of the crown prince of the realm. Our hero is threatened and sent into exile. Off camera, he travels for a decade or so learning his craft. When he returns he chances upon the young woman and they become interested in each other once again, which makes the crown prince really unhappy. He tries to rid himself of our hero once again. In the mean time he ends up killing the girl. The rest of the movie is an elaborate sting our hero sets up get even with the crown prince. It’s just great. I really liked this movie.
Netflix – 4 stars

Lady in the Water

Another winner. A water sprite shows up in a housing complex swimming pool. She is pursued by a strange, wolf-like creature that has grass for fur and can blend in with the shrubbery. The superintendent for the project discovers her and does whatever he can to help her return home before the wolf thingy can get her. There is a whole cast of wonderful characters that have to play a part in the process of getting her home according to the prophesy. At the end, these characters turn out to be not who we think they are. I really liked this movie too and almost gave it 4 stars.
Netflix – 3 stars

Flyboys

This is pretty standard fare about the mix of volunteers who joined the Lafayette Escadrille in World War I. It has all the standard characters and every plot cliche you could ever want in a movie of this sort. It brings nothing new to this type of film, but it is well done and you are happy with it at the end so it gets its 3 stars.
Netflix – 3 stars

The Secret Agent

For a living the main character sells racy pictures in London in the early 20th century. But secretly, he is an anarchist working for the Russians. They don’t feel like they are getting their money’s worth out of him and order him to blow up the Grenwich Observatory. Things go wrong which leads to an unexpected series of events. The movie starts out slow as it is defining its characters and plot. But once the pieces are in place it takes off and is fun to watch.
Netflix – 3 stars

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Viracocha – Project Complete

I was supposed to have the sculpture completed by Friday, September 14, but when I heard that one of the other sculptors wasn’t going to be done till the early part of this week, I told them I would take a few extra days myself. Even then, I only just got done in time. I worked pretty steadily through the weekend. Monday I put in over 6 hours and Tuesday, the day I had to deliver it, I worked almost 10 hours, right up to the delivery deadline of 5:00. Then I had a few more hours of driving up to Dubuque and installing it.

Putting on the finishing touches

Here I am in the frantic rush to finish.

By the time we finally got it installed it was too dark to take a good picture. I will take one when they have the opening reception and post it then. It is scheduled for October 4th.

I want to thank Tom Newport who volunteered the use of his crane and trailer to help me take the piece up to Dubuque and install it. Also, Steve Piper who helped with the transport and installation. Karen did a great job documenting the process.

After the installation we went to an art show that Tom was participating in and then out for dinner and a couple of drinks. Great time.

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Viracocha – Coming together

I’ve been getting the last bits of materials for the sculpture, slowly but surely. They are almost all in process and should be here soon. The deadline for me to deliver it is next Friday and it will be a close call for me to make it. I did find out that there is a small grace period so I don’t have to be quite so frantic.

Since the last entry I have put up the main structure of the sculpture and added some of the frills. The body and headdress pieces are much easier to work on laying flat in the shop than on the structure so I will try to get them as complete as possible before I weld them on. The biggest challenge is going to be putting on all the aluminum and brass accent pieces. They can’t be welded so I have to drill and tap holes for them so they can be attached with screws. Hundreds of them.

I made lots of progress over the weekend. I got all the steel welded together and ground smoothe for one side for the face, body and headdress. I also got all the steel welded and ground for the headdress on the other side. Monday I hope to get all the rest of the parts completed.

I will leave them unattached for now so I can more easily drill the holes for the accents.

Here is how it looked at the end of the day on Sunday.

Butch building Viracocha

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Movie Reviews – August 2007

Sorry for the delay with this month’s reviews. I had a hard drive crash and I had to reestablish the blog on another computer. Also, I won’t be able to redo the banner for a while because all the photos were clobbered.

This was another light month moviewise. The third season of the TV series “Deadwood” is finally available and this accounted for six of our Netflix selections this month. I don’t consider “Deadwood” a movie, so it won’t be reviewed here, but as an aside, it’s really worth watching. Here is what we saw:

Title Made Saw Rating
Nancy Drew 2007 8/3/07 3
Bourne Ultimatum 2007 8/11/07 3
Deep Sea 3D/Dinosaurs Alive 2006/2007 8/16/07 4/3
The Last Legion 2007 8/17/07 3
Nightwatch 1998 8/30/07 2

Here are my reviews:

Nancy Drew

This was a nice little movie. Nancy, as you would expect, is fresh and perky. She solves murders but she has such an optimistic outlook. Her father has to go to Los Angeles for a while so she moves there with him. He makes her promise that she will try to be a normal kid when she’s there, no sleuthing. She reluctantly agrees but when he leaves making the arrangements to her, she rents the vacant mansion of a movie star that was murdered 20 years ago. Of course the murder was never solved so Nancy finds herself in the middle of a mystery without even trying. Hollywood corruption, missing heirs and the unsolved murder itself are all woven into a dandy enough little mystery that it stands on its own without benefit of our famous young detective.

Theater – 3 stars

Bourne Ultimatum

In an effort to discover who he is, Bourne meets with a journalist who has been writing about a secret CIA section called Blackbriar and mentions Bourne in an article. Bourne wants to know his source but the reporter refuses to tell of course. When the reporter is killed, Bourne steals his notes and sets off on a multicity quest that takes him from London, to Madrid, Tangier and finally to New York. All the time the people he seeks or is with are dropping like flies. He ends up back where he received his basic training and the scene is set for the final showdown. We tried to see this movie last week but it was sold out. And when we went this week is was almost sold out. We had to sit in about the 4th row which was too close even for me. There was a lot of intentional camera movement, especially in the running scenes and at times it was fairly confusing. The story was good though and the movie had a lot of exciting action.
Theater – 3 stars

Deep Sea 3D/Dinosaurs Alive

This summer I have been babysitting Rachel on Thursdays and one of our favorite things to do is see a movie. Nancy Drew was one of them. When Rachel said, “When are we going to the IMAX to see a 3D movie again?” I didn’t have to be asked twice. We try to work it so we can see two of them back to back if we can. I was looking forward to seeing Dinosaurs Alive but I thought I had already seen Deep Sea 3D. Rachel told me that we hadn’t seen it though so I got tickets for both of them.

Deep Sea 3D was breathtaking. The photography was phenominal and the 3D was especially good. It also featured many animals that you don’t normally see and they appeared to be just an arm’s length away. In fact, like other underwater 3D shows I have seen, the plankton and small fish swim by right in front of you and you feel you have to scratch your nose. There is a particularly nice sequence with a Right Whale that gives you a real feel for just how big they are. I gave this one a 4.

Dinosaurs Alive was a little bit of a disappointment. Still good, but not as good as it could have been. Most of the movie was a documentary of field and museum work and some historical footage of the Andrews Expedition to Mongolia from years ago. It was done flat in a window superimposed over a 3D background of the same countryside. The fun came when they did “fly-overs” of museum displays of dinosaurs bones. And better yet when they animated the critters in 3D and set them in real 3D backgrounds. The problem was that the 3D camera they used had too much lens separation which causes things to be in super (hyper) 3D. When looking at distant vistas this is fine, but when looking at normal distance shots of people, something looks just plain wierd. You can’t quite put your finger on it. When they did close-ups, it was unwatchable. There was some other small difficulty with superimposing the animation over the real backgrounds. Sometimes the animals looked like they were floating slightly above the ground and other times they looked like they were standing in holes. But the dinosaur animation, which is what we came to see, was the best I’ve ever seen and so sucked the movie out.
IMAX – 4/3 stars

The Last Legion

Right after a newly crowned boy emperor is named Caesar, the Goths invade Rome and he is imprisoned on the island of Capri. His honor guard has been taken prisoner also and are awaiting execution when the captain, who has been mistaken for dead, frees them and they go to Capri to rescue the boy. They are betrayed by an old friend and their Byzantine allies and have only one hope… to locate the lost Ninth Legion in Britannia and return to throw out the Goths. In Britain they find the legion has been disbanded and that they have been followed by a death squad of Goths who ally themselves with the evil British King Vertigorn. They make a last stand at Hadrian’s wall and win the day. There is a surprise ending but it was hidden in plain sight all through the movie. I figured it out about half way through. The movie is interesting for the costumes and setting. The props in England are heavy handed, fake Stonehenge-like monument and the like. The British are depicted as barbarians even though they have been Romanized for nearly 500 years. Mediocre daring-do but still qualifies as a very low 3 for me. There was nothing too objectionable.
Theater – 3 stars

Nightwatch

A law student takes a job as a night watchman at the City Morgue. Besides being creeped out in the surroundings, mysterious things start happening. A serial killer who takes his victim’s eyes after he kills them is on the rampage and our hero is getting himself tied up in it somehow. He interacts with a disturbed friend, a surly homocide cop, his girlfriend, a wierdo doctor who runs the morgue and a prostitute who ends up being one of the victims. The first part of the movie is extremely tedious and just plain unpleasant. Things pick up about half way through but the movies’s initial failures simply trade up to bigger nastiness. The movie does trick you about the murderer, but the ending is grisly and did nothing for me.
Netflix – 2 stars

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Viracocha – The Metal Arrives

I picked up a big load of metal for my Viracocha sculpture on Wednesday afternoon. Karen had the van and I had to use her car so I couldn’t get all the metal I needed just then. I drove back over today with the van and got the rest of the stuff I needed for now. I still have a few pieces yet to design and I have to get all the flashy brass, copper and aluminum cut out but I can get the whole thing about 85% done with what I have right now.

Metal for Viracocha

Rather than start assembling the whole sculpture right off, I decided to weld up some of the subassemblies instead of doing them as I need them. That way, when I start putting things together everything will be ready. The first thing I did was assemble the glyph panels. There are 3 sizes of these; the biggest is for structural bracing, the middle ones are the staff heads, and the littlest ones are torso details. The metal company who cut out the pieces, Marion Iron, couldn’t cut one of them, it was too detailed for their machine. And they made a mistake on one piece. Luckily I got some of the drop off from them and could redo it. Unfortunately, their automatic machine does a better job than my poor excuse for hand cutting.

Glyph Supports

Their machine just does the basic cut outs. When I got the blank pieces, I had to go in and add some details. I got the hands and feet done today and tomorrow I hope to get the body details done and maybe start to put some of it together.

Hands, Feet and Signature

More later…

In other sculpture news, one of the pieces I got back from the From Our Hands gallery in Des Moines a couple of weeks ago is in for a make over. I plan to have it painted bright red. On Monday I took it to Triple E Manufacturing and left it to be sand blasted. I picked it up this morning and took it right over to the painter, A-1.

Also, I stopped by the Corner House gallery yesterday and talked to the new owner, Mary Suess. I showed her some of the things on my sculpture web page and she said she wanted to have some of them in her sculpture garden. That will be great.

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Garden Show Yard Art

My sculptor friend Steve Piper insists that there is more money to be made producing yard art than in proper sculpture. He may be right. Last year he made quite a number of decorative birds and sold quite a few. So he convinced me to give it a try. Steve’s pieces were man sized birds. Sort of stork like in appearance. He used car hoods for the wings, cutting them out so they looked like feathers.

Butch and the Celtic HareSo for the last five or six weeks I have been busy making yard art. I didn’t want to do the type of thing Steve did so I used my Prairie Moon sculptures as a guide for the type of thing I would build. Since the idea is to make the things inexpensively, I used simple materials and designs. I left the welds rough because grinding can account for lots of time. I did grind a few areas that absolutely had to have it.

I started with the idea of having several different designs with about a half dozen pieces each. But as the deadline approached I ended up with 7 of one and 6 of another. The third design proved to be more difficult to fabricate than I had anticipated and I only got one of them done. I incorporated it into one of the pieces of the second design. That one was the Celtic Hare.

The last week before the show it rained every day so the ground was nice and soft and easy to press the pieces in.

The first ones I called Yard Art One and they were about 6 feet tall and made of rerod and flat bar stock rolled into a ring. At first I was going to incorporate hooks to hand bird feeders on, but that wouldn’t look right if you just wanted to use it as art. So I decided that instead of hooks welded onto the rerod, I would suggest the customer use “S” hooks. Then they could have the piece either with bird feeders or without.

Yard Art 1

YardArt2Web.jpgThe second design I called Yard Art Two surprisingly enough. The were made with nicer materials. Square tubing and solid rod with rerod for the ground stakes. My original intent was to put a ring on the top, similar to the first ones. But I just acquired a new plasma cutter so I decided to make decorative disks instead. this proved to be a lot bigger problem than I thought it would be so I made 3 of the disks and used rings for two others.

My third design was going to be the Celtic Hares. They were going to have a springy base so it would look animated when the wind blew. I used the steel I got for the disks to make it but it turned out to be way too heavy for the springy base, so I used the last frame from the second design to support it. I may still try to build some of the hares with lighter metal and a bit smaller in size. Also shown below is a detail of one of the cutout disks

Celtic Hare and Moon and Stars disk

The entry fee for the show was right, $15, and you got a table and chair besides the space to show your work. My spot was perfect. Shady with a breeze blowing all day. We had lots of traffic, being right next to the outdoor cafeteria tables. Karen went around the show and had a look at everyone else’s booths. When she got back she spelled me while I had a look around. When I was away she made the first sale.

The customers were really complimentary. By the end of the day, I had sold 5 of the sculptures all told. I also had three requests from retail stores to provide them with stock wholesale. That could be nice.

All in all, this turned out to be a pretty good deal for me.

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Presidential Candidates Night

Saturday we went to a Candidate Forum to listen to most of the Democrats who are running for the Presidency in 2008. I think all but one of them appeared at the event so it was a good opportunity to start deciding who you might want to vote for.

For those of you who aren’t from Iowa, we are both blessed and cursed by this type of thing. Most states have a state convention, a mini version of the national convention. In Iowa we have “caucuses”. Iowa has the distinction of being the first state in the nation to make its selection of delegates. This is good because we are a small state and the candidates can make themselves known in a cost effective manner and can spend a lot of time here. It is bad for us because we get a concentration of political activity that most states don’t have to put up with. This time around the election process has started months before it normally does and I’m afraid this will be the model for the future. We joke that we don’t decide who we are going to vote for till we have had each candidate over for dinner at least 3 times.

Our friends Tom and Jenny Wertz got tickets to the event and gave us a couple of them. Part of the deal was admission to the VIP tent where several of the candidates came and rubbed shoulders with us, the common folk. Most of them were very friendly and spent a minute or two chit-chatting with us and didn’t mind a bit posing for pictures with us. Several didn’t show at the tent and you can tell which ones they were because I had to get pictures of them when they were up on the podium.

2008 Democrat Candidates
Karen Thorpe with Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, Christopher Dodd, Joseph Biden, Barack Obama, Elizabeth and Dennis Kucinich and Karen Thorpe

The big coup was me getting Karen’s picture with Hillary Clinton, but speaking with Dennis and Elizabeth Kucinich was a total delight. She was actually more of a hit than he was.

Because the political process started so early this time around we are undecided who we want to support. After listening to all their speeches, we would be happy with any of them and their proposed programs and political philosophies. Dennis Kucinich is always fun to hear. By far and away he is the most dynamic speaker and can work the audience into a fever pitch but his viewpoint is probably a little too far to the left for many people (not me) and he isn’t taken as seriously as I think he should be. Besides him, I was most impressed with Clinton’s and Edwards’s speeches. Prior to this event I was leaning slightly towards Edwards but I have been warming up to Biden recently. I heard him speak at a similar event when he was running for the Presidency in 1988 and I was very impressed. However, his presentation at this event wasn’t as good as some of the other candidates. Barack Obama didn’t impress me either and I’m afraid Christopher Dodd is too obscure to be viable. It will be interesting to see who wins the caucuses. Usually a couple of candidates self distruct before the big day. That happened to Biden in 1988. I hope it doesn’t this time.

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