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1/3/2019

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Back to Simple

 
Back to Simple
Evolution
For five years I continually had a steel Ring Dance sculpture underway. Each led to the next in an organic flow of possibilities realized. At this point there are eleven pieces. Many of them are decorating the landscape here at the refuge. Three have sold and one is on extended loan. It’s likely the series is complete—but I’ve said that before, then found myself with an idea for another.


Ring Dance No.1
Ring Dance No.1–INCEPTION, galvanized steel, 48" x 48" x 84", sold
There are several threads that weave through them all. Rings, of course, but also a ritual, exploratory process that put me in collaboration with the materials and fabrication in a quest to discover (and be surprised by) the eventual form. 

As the process evolved they became more complex and dense, varying from complete chaos to ideas of order, from an assembly of iterations of one element to a complex that involved five or six different shapes, and from fourteen elements overall to too many to count.  

Each of the final pieces has its grace and strengths; they each exist as individuals and as generations of kin—as dependent on one another as they are each freed from those that came before. 

Looking Back
When ten were complete I looked back to the original, the great grandmother of them all, and wondered what it was that I found so singularly compelling about that first.

Besides the pure clarity of being the first, I realized it was also the most simple.
It had the fewest parts, as well as the fewest rules of engagement. These details give it an open, uncomplicated stance I appreciate. Simplicity is its strength. Over the next few weeks the idea for the ultimate Ring Dance, #11, took form.

The guidelines for ELEVEN were simple: it would only have eleven rings, organized one by one with no preconceived overall form—but it would be the first with open rings against the ground, offering the illusion that the structure continues under the surface, as if it were merely the very top of a huge structure growing from roots in the mysterious depths of the planet. Sometimes becoming complex is an important part of getting back to simple. 

Ring Dance #11, ELEVEN is here at the Refuge. Come see.
Picture
Ring Dance No.11—ELEVEN, steel, galvanized and powder-coated, $4,600
See Ring Dance Series
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11/10/2018

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The Poetry of Sculpture

 
Initiation-Don Freas
Initiation, View No1, wood, leather cord, 22” x 16” x 13”, $1800
The piece called “Initiation” began with wonder and a pile of black walnut scraps. I glued them together on a curve, then faired the faces and edges smooth. That gave me an intriguing form I hadn’t imagined at the outset. It reminded me of a piece of body armor, protection for the left half of the chest.

Curious about the other half, I tried some rib-forms, in hard maple, as if the other side of the chest were exposed. I appreciated the result, and came up with a stand on which to mount the piece. As it was the first piece I fabricated with no preconceived outcome, I named it "Initiation."

In contemplating the work as it has moved through shows and galleries around the Northwest I could see that on another level the piece represents a more transcendent initiation.
Initiation-Don Freas
Initiation, View No2
Picture

To know who we truly are we have to become vulnerable, exposing our inner world.

When we become aware of who we are there’s nothing to be afraid of.

The conclusion is a simple truth—what armor seeks to protect is the cage we’re in; vulnerability is the way out.

Don Freas
See all sculpture
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6/5/2017

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Holding On

 
What Shows Up in the Light

Highlighted

My sculpture “To Hold” was highlighted by the rising sun this morning. I went over to focus close on the figures, perched and teetering in their joint struggle.
Struggle

Holding On

Their struggle is mythological: they pull against forces they can’t see or comprehend. Holding on to one another and to those mysterious cords that descend into the underworld stabilizes them.

There is a sense that neither could do it alone, but what they combine their forces against remains a mystery. They can theorize but they better not let go, or so it seems.

Outside / Inside

The figures read as female and male, but that’s a metaphor, a representation of the active penetrative outward aspect, and the receptive introspective inward aspect that balances within each of us, regardless of gender.

In this case the active half is all-in, heroically pulling against a world-machine that pulls back, while the introspective half is just becoming aware that maybe they are only pulling against themselves. 

Reminds me to watch for such tension in myself today—and to appreciate the always moving sunlight.

Picture
To Hold
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1/6/2017

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Tree Guards

 
West Olympia Sculptural Tree Guards

City of Olympia Dedication

The City of Olympia will host a dedication for the Westside Olympia Sculptural Tree Guards—Monday January 9 at 2:30 pm.

My designs for the tree guards were accepted by the City of Olympia in 2008 when I still lived in Westside. Thanks to Stephanie Johnson's (Olympia Art, Parks and Recreation) persistent persuit of funding, they were fabricated in the summer of 2016 by the inmate training program at Walla Walla State Penitentiary.

They're sculptural and intended as bike racks.
City of Olympia

Monday, January 9, 2017
2:30 pm

Corner of Harrison Avenue
and Black Lake Boulevard
West Olympia, Washington
Map it!
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6/13/2016

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It takes a tribe…

 
Moving Day
Last Thursday, June 9th, was moving day for my Culture/ Ring Dance #10 that was on display for the City of Olympia Percival Plinth Project.

The sculpture has been holding court on the back stretch of the landing since last July. With help from the kids, we brought it home.

Stephanie Johnson of Olympia's Parks, Arts & Rec Department was on site to help uninstall the work.

…

Learn more about the project:
Percival Plinth Project
Culture/Ring Dance #10
Stephanie Johnson
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6/13/2016

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American Craft – In Olympia

 
American Craft
The New Teamwork
How We Work Together Now
June/July 2016
I was surprised to see a reference to my sculpture in the June/July 2016 issue of American Craft magazine (page 86).

The sculpture they covered just came home from the Percival Landing site two weeks ago, but you can see it here at the Refuge. 
American Craft
Click image to view online
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4/23/2014

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New Sculpture, New Sculpture Installation

 
Don Freas
Four new sculptures are hanging around the entry stairs at the Refuge. These pieces continue the “Ring Dance” series. They hold the space vacated by an older piece that just left the grounds for permanent installation in downtown Olympia. While I’ve been focused on other things these last months these intriguing structures have been quietly gestating in the background. I’m still surprised when I see them out there, dancing.  

Ring Dance #2/ CORE, which was at the west end of State St. on Percival Landing in 2012, is now mounted permanently in a street-side parklet near the NE corner of Fourth and Franklin Streets in Olympia. In the daytime its shadow walks across the sidewalk and climbs the building to the east. At night the streetlights print two copies of the piece in shadows on the wall. I’m honored to see the piece out on its own in the world. 

All the Ring Dance pieces are based on the abstract arrangement of circular elements. They are fabricated using a procedure that avoids pre-thinking what the result will look like. I collaborate with the elements and processes, adding them one by one to the piece, and sometimes in repeating clusters. As an overall thrust surfaces I work to enhance that. The process is unnerving at times. I don’t know how it will come out and that can make me anxious. Continuing anyway leads to final pieces I could never have imagined in advance. So I proceed. 

The new pieces, Ring Dance numbers six, seven, eight, and nine, are the result of a series of interwoven creative experiments based on rings made by slicing pipe, and a “staple” form made from a length of heavy channel iron. I wondered what would happen if I introduced the linear, masculine element of the staple, mixing it in with the rings. I also began experimenting with opening the rings so that they could intersect in new ways. 

All four pieces developed at once as I played with the elements and connections that fascinated me. At various times I thought it was all moving toward one piece. At other times it was all moving toward more scrap. Finally one piece after another emerged as discreet siblings. Just like us they are made of the same stuff. Through whimsy, chance, and intention, each becomes a unique character.

Be well,
Don

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7/30/2013

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In Public

 
Don Freas
For Olympia’s 2013 Percival Plinth Sculpture Project I applied with the TINE BALL I put together a year or two ago. The core of the piece is a double spiral made from the half-circle spring-steel tines of a hay rake. I knew that if it was accepted into the exhibition I’d have to come up with a base for the piece, some way to affix it to the plinth and hold it up against the sky. 

The TINE BALL was already galvanized and powder-coated silver. When the proposal was accepted, I fabricated two curving rods from a scrap-pile of short 7/8” steel rounds, and cut out some brackets that would allow me to bolt them to two of the 3” spring coils on the tines. Some scraps of 2” angle iron became a base that would fit the design constraints of the plinth. 

With the piece all together I realized I wanted it to be red—like OXYGEN (Ring Dance #5)—in order to stand out in the complicated downtown, harbor-front space of Percival Landing. It’s summertime—powder-coating took four weeks. I installed it June 10, on schedule. 

To me, part of TINE BALL’s beauty is the delicacy of the form. A breeze can make it shudder. It’s a bit delicate for the “fraternity rules” classically considered for such situations. I knew there was a risk in putting it out where the public can interact with it. The sign says “do not climb”—but eight days after installation someone apparently did just that. My guess is he or she tried to get inside the ball. I know, I’ve thought of that too. Tine points broke loose at each hub. 

Now we were only one week from the opening reception. I had to repair and reinforce the piece, and get it coated again (third time’s the charm!) We took it down and over the weekend. I repaired and beefed-up the hubs and added nine more welds to stabilize the belly of the ball. 

C T Specialties in Olympia was just as busy as the first time I took it in for powder-coat, but they recognized my plight and had it ready in four days. I tipped them enough to buy everyone a couple of beers, and loaded-up the rebuilt TINE BALL still hot from the oven. We bolted it back on the plinth fifteen minutes before the opening reception began. Unbelievable. 

Now, the risk is still there. The piece is stronger but still delicate—you wouldn't see the difference unless I pointed it out. It might be able to withstand another exuberant “return to the womb”—but I hope I don’t find out. Meanwhile, it’s there. Come down and see it. 

If you get there during July or August, the city has ballots available in pamphlet-boxes on the landing. Olympia will buy the sculpture that gets the most votes, for their growing collection. Voting ends August 31. Here’s an essential voting tip: your vote won’t count unless you fill in the box that asks what it is you like about the piece you have chosen. The answer is subjective; you can’t get it wrong—so answer the question and be counted! 

In other news: Debi of 33 Image Design rebuilt my sculpture and furniture website. It’s now searchable and very slick. I also have a verbal commitment with Gallery IMA in Seattle’s Pioneer Square to begin representing my work soon. I’ll let you know. 

Cheers!
Don

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4/16/2013

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Emergence from Winter

 
PLACEHOLDER TULIPS

Every year tulips planted by the last residents on this place open their petal-jaws and unfold bright red and yellow over an old stone laundry sink below the house. I’ve taken a picture every year since I came here. The tulips offer new expressions of themselves each year, that follow recognizable patterns. We could be fooled into thinking they are the same tulips. The background has been changing as the place evolves, as the work moves through.
Tulips

Revealing Form
REVEALING FORM
Much of my creative work this year has been involved with restoring the landscape around the studio and house. This winter we cleared tons of ivy, opening up Trickle Creek and its draw below the house. The creek drains ten or fifteen acres to the east and north. The watercourse rises by the blueberries at the top of the Refuge and runs down into Puget Sound, nine or ten months of the year. Decades of neglect and abuse had caused the old creek to present more like a drainage ditch and garbage dump when I first arrived. It flowed out of sight, silent through weeds.

Local ivy magician Daniel Marcotte directed a team that cleared the draw and brought in hundreds of reclaimed plants to restore the natural forest understory. While that was going on, Bill Lenker brought in many tons of granite boulders to define and ground the watercourse. 

Now flowing water sparkles, and sings, strengthened every time it rains. An occluded acre of the place has been opened up. At first it all felt too exposed; there was a sense of vulnerability. Now as the Indian Plum gets into full leaf, and the ferns begin to unfurl, it feels like revelation. Perception carries farther into the depths of the forest; dimension has been somehow doubled. The whole place feels larger—the invisible brought to light.

Ongoing Dance
ONGOING DANCE
 
Ring Dance No. 2/ CORE has been on Percival Landing in downtown Olympia, holding the ground at the corner of State and Water streets since last June, as part of the city’s year-long Percival Plinth outdoor sculpture exhibition. 

You already knew that, right? What you didn’t know is that a couple of weeks ago, Olympia's Parking Business Improvement Area decided to buy the piece for their Project for Public Spaces “Placemaking” initiative. Thank you, Olympia PBIA, for the recognition and support! Place it well. Sometime this year the piece will be moved to a new location downtown, not yet determined. I’ll let you know when I know. The rings will keep dancing in public.

While Ring Dance No.1 and No.2 make their way in world, No.3 and No.4, a relational set of two, entitled “DUET,” are still available. You can see them up by the entrance to the Refuge, by the blueberries.

NEXT DANCE

Last week I finished a smaller Ring Dance, composed of 30 six-inch steel rings sliced from an oxygen tank. The piece measures 42” tall, and stands in a space roughly 16” in diameter. I had this one galvanized and powder-coated, in fire-engine red. It stands out in a complex outdoor or landscape placement, and is small enough to be indoors as well. The working title was “Tiny Dancer” which has a fairly obvious baby-boomer cultural reference. Now that it’s finished, the piece begs to be called the more timely “OXYGEN.” Which do you prefer? [The piece has been sold, and lives in Milwaukee.]

Be well,
Don
OXYGEN
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10/4/2012

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Autumn and Arts Walk

 
tine Ball
Olympia's Fall Arts Walk is tomorrow—the evening of Friday October 5—and continues through the afternoon of October 6. Sorry for the late notice. 

I’ll have two pieces completed this summer on display along with pieces by other metal workers from the SPSCC welding program. We are showing again at the Euphorium, in the Security Building, at the corner of Fourth Ave. and Washington Street in downtown Olympia. 

TINE BALL, a piece composed of twenty recycled (and reconfigured) tines from a dump rake, will be there, along with a galvanized steel table I wrote about in a previous posting, called WINDSWEPT STEEL TABLE. The table base is made from some twisty scraps left over when I bent the rings for Ring Dance #3 & 4. 

Thank you to those of you who took the time to vote in Olympia’s Percival Plinth  Sculpture Project. The votes are in, and Olympia sculptor Ross Matteson’s bronze and steel piece “Windstar” gathered the people’s choice award with nearly 30% of the votes cast. Congratulations to Ross! You can see more of his well-wrought wildlife bronzes at Matteson Sculpture.

I have not heard how many votes “Ring Dance #2” received, but I continue to hear great response for the piece. You can enjoy it until next June at Percival Landing, and while driving around the corner of State and Water streets in downtown Olympia. The piece is for sale if you wish to continue enjoying it in your home or business landscape. I have three further Ring Dance pieces available, including the musical dyad subtitled “Duet.” 

We are having a gorgeous extended September here at the southern tip of the Salish Sea. It’s a bit dry, and the light breezes send a crisp sustaining whisper through the curling leaves still on the trees. Every step on the beach trail crunches with the leaves that have already fallen.

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    Don Freas
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    Don Freas is an artist, writer, and poet in Olympia, Washington.

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