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From YouTube: ARTscape Artist Interviews 2019
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A
Yeah,
my
name
is
Sharon
fooling
game
and
I'm
from
Socorro
New
Mexico.
Actually,
a
little
farming
community
called
Luis
Lopez,
where
my
studio
is
and
I'm
just
really
close
to
the
Bosque
del
Apache,
where
I
do
a
lot
of
research
for
my
wildlife
and
I
carved
the
little
girl
using
a
direct
carving
method
and
I
started
out
with
eleven
hundred
and
fifty
pounds
of
limestone,
which
is
you
know,
about
seven
and
a
half
cubic
feet,
and
basically
I
just
started
wailing
away
on
the
stone,
and
this
is
what
basically
showed
him.
A
You
know
revealed
itself
so
when,
when
the
little
girl
started
showing
herself
to
me,
I
thought
home
man
I'd
rather
be
carving
animals
or
something,
but
the
little
dog
started
showing
up.
So
it
made
me
happy
and
long
story
short
best
friends
forever
came
out
of
this
piece
of
stone,
I
really
like
to
carve,
but
the
best
thing
about
limestone
is
using
textures
and
playing
with
a
light,
because
that's
what
we're
doing
is
we're
playing
with
dark
and
light.
And
so,
when
you
look
at
her,
you
can
see
that
there's
places
where
I've
pierced
it.
A
B
We
live
right.
The
shop
is
right
along
a
wild
Canyon
of
the
Pecos
River
and
we
both
spend
a
lot
of
time
in
the
canyon
and
I.
Think
some
of
the
forms
of
the
canyon
come
through
into
the
piece,
the
lyricism,
and
also
the
just
working
with
with
hot
hot
steel,
the
the
bending
and
the
hammering
it
all
flows
together
into
an
abstract,
intuitive
sculpture,.
C
My
name
is
Shayna
Allen
I'm
from
Grand
Junction.
My
piece
is
called
balance
and
it's
made
from
cast
iron.
The
way
this
piece
was
made
was
with
a
CNC
router
would
cut
and
then
resin
sand,
molds
taken
of
that
wood
cut
and
then
placed
on
top
of
each
other
in
this
off-kilter
fashion.
For
this
piece
is
called
balanced.
D
Hi
my
name's
Ken,
cable,
I'm
from
Buena
Vista
Colorado,
my
piece
ears
called
Earl
and
steel
guitar.
The
inspiration
was
I
had
a
piece
of
metal.
This
piece
in
particular
that
looked
like
a
cutout
from
for
a
guitar,
so
we
cut
woke
up
one
morning
and
said
I'm
going
to
make
a
guitar,
so
I
made
a
guitar
had
to
give
it
a
name
said:
name
it.
Steel,
guitar,
so
back
at
Tennessee
is
steel.
Guitar
was
a
dobro.
You
never
see
a
dobro
and
a
guitar
without
a
banjo
and
Earl
Scruggs.
E
Thumbs
up
hi,
my
name
is
Kyle
Caniff,
and
this
is
my
sculpture
for
Alamosa.
It's
called
sunflower
whirligig
and
it's
just
a
fun
innocent
kid
sculpture,
as
you
can
see
right
here
this
little
guy.
If
you
want
to
spin
it
whirligigs
or
pinwheels,
as
they're,
also
known
in
Chinese,
culture
represent
turning
one's
luck
around,
so
you
give
it
a
spin
and
that's
a
little
bit
of
the
symbolic
meaning
of
pinwheels
and
also
where
they
came
from
originally.
But
this
one
is
just
something
fun
and
innocent,
and
hopefully
everybody
now
also
can
enjoy.
Thank
you.
F
Hi
I'm
sure
he
Nico
Sh
from
Denver,
and
this
is
my
piece
called
gentle
that
is
being
installed
in
Alamosa
this
year.
I'm
very
excited
this
is
my
first
time
to
Alamosa
and
gentle
looks
like
it's
got
the
best
spot
here.
Next
to
the
spa
and
across
the
street
from
the
Alamosa
State
Bank
she's
she's,
sitting
down
quietly
she's
got
a
cut
toes
curled
and
sitting
with
this
tiny
little
smile
just
happy
to
be
in
front
of
the
flowers.
F
The
inspiration
for
this
piece
was
mostly
just
a
just
a
rest,
I
mean,
while
women
go
through
their
day
of
non-stop
commitments
and
the
chores
and
and
just
work.
This
is
a
moment
of
taking
rare,
taking
a
moment
off
and
taking
some
time
off.
I
call
it
gentle,
because
she
has
a
gentle
smile
and
she's
reminiscing
about
something
in
that
quick
moment
and.
G
My
name
is
pavia
Justinian
I'm,
a
sculptor
from
Fruita
Colorado,
and
this
is
Sigma
and
Sigma
is
both
woman
and
machine
and
I
was
inspired
to
make
her
buy
some
of
the
materials
that
I
found
in
my
mentors
studio.
So
my
mentor,
his
name
was
Dave
Davis.
He
started
the
art
on
the
corner
program
in
Grand
Junction
and
he
taught
me
so
much
about
sculpting
and
he
was
always
very
generous
with
sharing
his
materials
with
me.
G
So
over
his
lifetime
he
collected
a
lot
of
really
cool
stuff,
like
chrome,
bumpers
and
this
base
of
the
cream
separator
here
and
tractor
parts
and
wagon
parts
and
all
kinds
of
different
stuff.
So
the
first
inspiration
that
I
had
for
Sigma
was
this
chrome
piece
here.
It's
part
of
a
bumper
or
something
like
that.
But
when
I
saw
this,
it
really
just
I
saw
this
neck
here
and
this
chest
coming
down
and
I
just
I
kind
of
built
her
out
from
that
one
piece
and
yeah
it.
G
She
has
this
hand
kind
of
cradled
around
her
belly,
which
has
just
just
a
slight
roundness
to
it,
and
then
this
stone
here
it's
kind
of
this
egg
like
stone
in
this
recess.
Here
it's
these
things,
symbolize
fertility
to
me,
and
this
idea
that
you
know
a
a
mechanical
woman
could
bear
life.
So
those
are
some
of
the
ideas
behind
Sigma
I'm
very
excited
to
have
her
on
exhibit
here
in
Alamosa
and
yeah.
Thank
you.
So
much.
H
Hi,
my
name
is
Suzanne
Kane
I'm,
a
sculptor
from
las
Cruces,
New
Mexico-
and
this
is
my
third
year
in
lovely
Alamosa,
I'm,
always
happy
to
come
here.
It's
great
little
town,
I
love
this
public
art
program.
This
is
my
piece
called
fluorescence.
I
generally
do
work,
that's
inspired
by
plants
and
Botanica
and
weeds
and
the
desert,
where
I'm
from
this
one
I
often
use
ceramic
with
my
work.
H
This
one
is
entirely
welded
steel,
just
to
give
it
that
sturdier
outdoor
ability-
and
so
as
you
can
see,
it's
pretty
much
obvious
that
it's
a
flower
of
some
sort
I
enjoy
repetition
in
my
pattern.
So
you
get
these
repetition
of
a
line
to
fill
out
the
floral
top,
and
then
you
get
a
nice
shadowing
on
the
ground
which
creates
kind
of
a
second
or
a
little
bit
more
dimensionality
to
the
piece.
I
Okay,
hello,
my
name
is
Frank
Moore
Billo
I'm
from
Santa
Fe,
New,
Mexico,
and
really
happy
to
have
this
piece
head
over
heels
in
Alamosa
for
a
year
or
so.
This
sculpture
by
its
title
is
about
sort
of
the
emotional
feelings
you
you
have
when
you
really
like
something
that
you
go
head-over-heels
in
love
with
someone
or
head-over-heels
about
something
that
you
really
like
to
do,
and
the
form
of
the
piece
sort
of
speaks
to
that
with
it
coming
around,
and
then
this
element
rising
up
above
and
going
in
the
opposite
direction.
I
J
K
My
name's
sue,
Quinlan
and
I'm
from
Boulder
Colorado,
and
this
is
my
piece
in
the
mix
and
it's
steel
and
concrete,
and
the
steel
is
in
the
shape
of
a
crystal.
It
has
five
sides
and
the
concrete
I
wanted
it
to
be:
losing
out
and
kind
of
the
all
the
different
cultures
and
different,
a
mush
motions
of
the
little
faces
to
be
all
mixed
together:
kind
of
like
humanity,
and
it's
concrete.
It's
white
concrete
with
a
rust,
patina
and.
L
L
This
piece
that
we've
brought
to
share
with
you
in
Alamosa
is
called
thoughtful
minds.
It's
constructed
of
steel
and
aluminum
I
am
I
appreciate
the
way
both
of
the
expressions
on
both
sides
are
pensive
and
thoughtful.
I
think
we
all
need
to
be
a
little
bit
more
mindful
and
I
feel
like
public
art
is
one
of
those
things
that
helps
slow
us
down.
Give
us
something
to
ponder
for
a
little
while
and
and
then
be
purposeful
about
our
thoughts
and
our
minds.