About UCDA
Membership
Design Resources
Events
Going Green
UCDA Foundation
Contact Us
News and Announcements
Partner Events
Search
Site Index
 |
 |
|
 |
- E.T. Wickham Sculpture Park
- Palmyra, Tennessee
-
- by Tadson Bussey
-
- Just southwest of Clarksville in the
hills of Tennessee is the small town of Palmyra. Located there
along Buck Smith Road is the Wickham Sculpture Park, or at least
what is left of it.
-
- Enoch Tanner Wickham's imagination
is a treasure that will inspire and last the ages, even as his
concrete sculptures give way to vandalism and decay. Wickham created about 40 statues between
1952 and 1970, when he died at 87. According to Stacy Smith Segovia, of the
Clarksville Leaf Chronicle, "The sculptures have since become
known as one of only seven folk art sites of this size and importance
in the country."
-
|
 |
-
- These statues were built of concrete,
which Wickham, a self-taught artist, applied over rough metal
armatures. He used whatever he could find, from abandoned bed
rails to iron poles. He tied these together with electrical cord
and attached wire mesh, rolling it into tubes for arms and legs.
The concrete surfaces were built up with many layers, with the
details (pockets, cuffs, etc.) inscribed directly into the wet
surface. Wickham then used bright ready-mixed colors of commercial
grade oil and latex paints. While he was alive, Wickham kept
the pieces protected and refreshed with coats of paint.
-
-
- Above: Family vacation photo taken prior to Wickham's
death in 1970 (photo by Charles Runyan).
-
- Above: The completed statues of John F. Kennedy, Estes
Kefaufer, and Patrick Henry. A statue of Robert Kennedy
was later added to the right of John F. Kennedy (1968, photo
courtesy of Mary Evans).
-
- Joe Schibig, Wickham's grandson, recalls,
"While my grandfather was alive, he took better care of
his statues than his house or yard because making statues and
displaying them to the public were of utmost importance to him.
It kept him physically and mentally strong into his eighties,
but eventually age caught up with him."
-
- The statues were originally built along
both sides of Buck Smith Road. Almost all the stautes on the
north side of the road are memorials to individuals or events,
many of which sit on bases that contain messages appropriate
to the work. Included on this side were statues of John F. Kennedy,
Robert Kennedy, Patrick Henry and Estes Kefauver (standing behind
the Liberty Bell); W.D Hudson; Austin Peay; Sergent Alvin C.
York; Andrew Jackson; Lester Soloman, Daniel Boone, Piominco
and Sitting Bull; as well as Sam Davis and Bill March (shaking
hands); Wickham's own Oxen and Wagon; a Bull's head; United Sportsman's
Club and a WWII Memorial. "The family recalls that Wickham
often worked from photos or artistic renderings," said Janelle
Standburg Aieta, adjunct professor of art at Austin Peay University,
"It is known that he visited the Andrew Jackson monument
on the grounds of the State Capitol in Nashville, and his sculpture
of Jackson on a rearing horse bears a striking resemblance."
-
- The statues on the south side of the
road, however, were of a religious nature. Using a giant sundial
he built as a backdrop, he created a multi-figure scene depicting
the miracle of Our Lady of Fatima, which included the Virgin
Mary raised up on a pole. One that does not fit into either category
is a self portrait of the artist riding a bull. The inscription
on the base reads, "E.T. Wickham headed for the wild and
wooley west, remember me boys while I'm gone."
-
-
Right:
Building statues was
hard, grueling work, especially for a man in his eighties,
but Enoch Tanner single-handedly built each of these statues. Each
of the larger ones took about 6 weeks to complete. Occasionally
he got a little help from his grandchildren (1965 photo courtesy
of Joe and Iris Schibig).
-
-
- "After my grandfather's death,"
Schibig remembers, "no one was around to guard his statues.
In time they were ravaged by the weather and vandals, mostly
by the latter."
-
- "What a shame," Schibig continues.
"He was a hard-working creator, but the vandals and the
elements were-and still are-relentless destroyers."
-
- Photographer Clark Thomas first came
across the statues three years after Wickham's death. "In
1973, within five minutes of stepping out of my car at the Wickham
site, I felt compelled to photograph everything-every statue,
every quotation, from every angle-until I had it all covered.
Then I wanted to come back the very next morning to see it in
another light, knowing I would probably want to shoot it all
again."
-
- "Being so compulsive," states
Thomas, "wasn't in my nature. Wickham's site was simply
that compelling. Everything about it said, 'Look at me, see me
and read these words and remember me and what you see here.'
His work made me photograph it."
-
- "As it turns out, the photographs
that I made that day allow people to see things that no longer
exist, and the contrast with what is left today is dramatic,
" Thomas adds.
-
-
-
-
- Above: Statues as they appear along Buck Smith Road
today (July 2004, photo by Tadson Bussey).
-
- Above: Statues as they appeared in late 1960s. Statues
from left to right: Wickham aboard a reconstruction of his Old
Wagon Pulled by Oxen; Sam Davis and Bill Marsh; W.D. Hudson;
Estes Kefauver, Patrick Henry, J.F. Kennedy and Robert Kennedy
(behind the Liberty Bell); Austin Peay; Totem Pole; and John
Wickham on Horseback (late 1960s, photo courtesy of Joe and Iris
Schibig).
- Thomas Clark was so right. The statues
are a reminder of one man's imagination and dream. It serves
as inspiration to us all. Dixie Webb, associate professor of
art at Austin Peay University, says it so clearly, "Enoch
Tanner Wickham achieved much and little in his life. Enoch Tanner
Wickham left a legacy."
-
- For more information:
To view Clark Thomas' photographs: http://simplephotographs.com/wickham/
-
- Other essays and stories about E.T.
Wickham and his statues: http://customshousemuseum.org/wickham
-
-
-
|
 |