Let the threadjacking continue...
Yeah, we found out yesterday that someone is interested in buying the turtle. The museum rarely sees much work sold out of exhibits (to the point that the staff had some trouble with requests during dad's show), but four pieces out of dad's show have sold - assuming he can catch up with the people and make arrangements. We had the turtle at the end of our hallway for close to two years, and our daughter used to always run her hand across it when we carried her down the hall. I'm really going to miss that one.
Dad rarely exhibits his work, especially in a one-man show like this, but I'll let folks know the next time it happens. He has a number of pieces that are always "for sale" even though they live in my parents' house (or, in the case of the turtle and the jellyfish, our house). The turtle, waves (which are mine), gator, gator tails, and jellyfish were all made on an island off the Mississippi gulf coast called Horn Island - it's where Walter Anderson used to do a lot of his painting. The Memphis College of Art (where dad teaches) takes a group of students there for a week every May and dumps them on the island for a week to create art. They were made with minimal tools (one or two hammers), shaped against wet sand, and annealed in a bonfire.
Since you were in the sub service, you might be interested to know about the five-piece silver service on the USS
Tennessee. When the navy commissioned the
Tennessee in the late 80's, the state of Tennessee offered to hand over the silver service from the old 1920's era battleship. The navy pointed out that a sub really didn't have room to store a 100+ piece silver service complete with punch bowl, and they turned the state down. Instead, the state commissioned the Metal Museum to oversee the fabrication of a small, custom made service specifically for the sub. The museum hired dad since he was the only person in the state (if not the entire region) who could design and raise a silver service like that. There is a sterling silver tray, tea pot, coffee pot, creamer, and sugar bowl riding around on that sub to this day that dad made at the museum smithy back in 1988 or 1989. The design reflects the submarine, with the bottom mirror smooth and the top chased with a heavy texture to represent the ocean both below and above the surface. The two sections were separated by a rough wavy line, and the state seal of Tennessee straddled the line to represent the sub's place on and beneath the surface.