The Michael Garman Museum & Gallery Newsletter
February 18th, 2016
Issue No.44
In This Issue
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Adventures of a Vagabond Sculptor: New Sculptures on the Horizon


The next edition of Adventures of a Vagabond Sculptor  is here!
 
Adventures of a Vagabond Sculptor is now a quarterly newsletter.  In each issue, we share one of Michael Garman's stories describing the adventures and experiences that have inspired his work for the past 50 years.  

Learn more about the incredible adventures of this vagabond artist with the independent film:  The Life & Work of Michael Garman.

 



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New Sculptures on the Horizon
2008 - 2016

Back in 2008, I started having trouble catching my breath.  I felt like I was moving through sludge, and the smallest effort just plain wore me out. For the first time in my life, I felt like an old man.  So I went to see some doctors, and then some more.  

Eventually I had that moment, face to face with a man wearing a stethoscope as he tells me that it might be time to get my affairs in order, that my heart would not last much longer.

I tried to do just that.  I began the process of saying goodbye to my staff, my fans, my sculptures.  I held a press conference and announced that we would be closing our doors in January of 2009.  And then an amazing thing happened.

I didn't die.  Funny thing - the response from my customers and my community gave me the strength to keep going.  Then my youngest daughter, Vanessa Garman, offered to take over the day to day operation of the business, allowing me to get the rest I needed.

"Rest?  Who needs rest?"  I asked while gulping for breath.  Sure enough , the voice of that stubborn fool I'd always been started talking into my ear - "Why spend your time thinking about tomorrow and what might be coming?  You've got things to do today.  And stories to tell.  You've got sculptures - dozens of sculptures - still waiting for you to create."


With Vanessa at the helm, I had the freedom to make the sculptures  that meant the most to me.  O ver the next two years, I created 12 new sculptures including  Rendezvous,  
Incident Commander Prairie Companions Powerliner  and many more.  

These new pieces came alive in my hands, giving me a reason to keep going even if I needed to drag an oxygen tank around with me while I worked.  

Eventually fatigue got the best of me and I decided to take some rest in California.  Whether or not I would ever return was a question I decided not to ask.

It has taken 6 years to get healthy again - or healthy enough for a 77-year-old former vagabond.  It's been my sculptures, and the stories they tell me, that keep me going.

A few months ago, I grabbed some clay and went back to work.  I thought about the heroes I've always admired and the stories they tell.  For example, Mexican Revolutionaries like Pancho Villa and Emiliano Zapata have captured my imagination since I was just a boy.  I am thrilled to be creating sculptures that honor such courage.

This spring, in celebration of my 78th birthday, I will be introducing 5 new sculptures.  It is my hope that my fans and customers will be as excited as I am to see these characters come to life.