A
few miles southeast of Wichita, Kansas, lies the town of Rose Hill, and it is
there you will find The
School of the Transfer of Energy. The “head” of the school is a painter,
carpenter, printmaker, sculptor, farmer named Jack Baumgartner. Oh, he’s a
puppeteer, too.
I
can’t remember how I happened upon his web site, but one day I landed there,
and found it to be a remarkable place indeed. He describes it as a
studio-workshop-farm, and it is all of these but something more, too.
Part
of the wonder is how he documents what he’s doing – primarily by photography.
The photographs themselves – working at red cedar, drawing, sawing, details of
prints – are works of art in themselves. They remind me of the mystery, or
almost-mystery that you find in Ann Voskamp’s photos at A Holy Experience. Or is it wonder?
Baumgartner
creates objects of art large, small and in-between. He creates furniture and
wooden sculpture, decorative items using a deer skull, carved goblets and
plates. And the prints, oh, yes, the prints, things of beauty and intrigue,
pulling you in to study them closely to see all of what’s there – and you keep
finding new things.
Pay
Jack a visit, and see some of the beauty that’s there. Be forewarned – you can
spend a lot of time in The School of the Transfer of Energy.
Illustration: the Archway by Jack Baumgartner (detail).
What a wonderful site.
ReplyDeleteI'm always intrigued by his posts.
ReplyDeleteI love Jack's artwork and have one of his carved wooden bowls here in our home in Haiti. Jack is a wonderful artist and friend! I have written several reviews of his artwork here:
ReplyDeletehttp://robbiepruitt.blogspot.com/2011/12/stone-and-knee-art-review-of-jacob.html
http://robbiepruitt.blogspot.com/2011/09/jacob-wrestling-angel-of-god.html
http://robbiepruitt.blogspot.com/2012/04/go-on-saint-thomas-art-review.html
Thanks for posting this Glynn!
What an encouragement to see this today! Thank you for the honor, Glynn. How wonderful as well that you know Robbie.
ReplyDelete