Sculptor John
Waddell
Celebrates the Diversity
of Life
http://www.redrockreview.com/Sep01/5story.html
http://www.artbywaddell.com/328937.html
The elixir of life, the breath
of the soul, the ethereal
portions of existence that give
us meaning - this is art.
Whether we are stirred by the
muse or our inner craving to
create, we are all artists, life
is art and this is something to
celebrate.
This celebration of life is but
one message renowned Arizona
sculptor John Henry Waddell
wants to share with others
through his work. But it is his
biggest message. And to make
sure it is heard, or should we
say seen, Waddell felt, what
better a place to display his
work than the two-acre sculpture
garden within the Sedona
Cultural Park. Here, in this
secret place that opens up
breathtaking views to the west
and north, these sculptures
stand in a place reserved just
for them.
“I had this grouping that I had
completed in 1997 and had always
wondered where it might go
because it requires such
fantastic space,” Waddell said.
“Then Jane Jozoff, chairman of
the state fine arts commission,
who knew about my work, had
arranged a meeting with Dan
Schay and other board members at
the Sedona Cultural Park at
which time she presented the
idea that I’d like to place some
work there. I became very elated
and spent two months going to
the park and exploring possible
sitings for their placement.”
Waddell’s sculptures includes
groupings Expulsion From The
Garden Of The Earth, Circle of
Womanhood, and Celebration. With
a timeless quality like the work
of Michelangelo of Florence or
Rodin in Paris, the figures are
without clothing. Thus they are
not dated by the transient
nature of style. Among the 14
sculptures, an age range between
17 months and 75 years is
depicted. The sculptures are
connected by pathways between
and around each grouping.
Although each is very
individualistic they are
connected by a common theme of
humanity. Several shaded benches
also designed by Waddell
encourages prolonged viewing.
None of the sculptures can be
seen from the roads circling the
park. Visitors viewing the work
will experience a wide range of
emotion, from joy to pathos.
“Expulsion,” Waddell adds, “is
meant to be a strong plea for
conservation. I took the
biblical theme of Adam and Eve
and brought it into present day
terminology.”
The sculpture, two bronze
figures, 83” tall or over six
and a half feet, stand among a
grove of Juniper trees that line
the hillside behind the Cultural
Park’s amphitheater. Through the
foliage, beyond their sorrowful
disposition, one can see the
beauty of the red rocks in the
distance - a dichotomous
reminder as to the impetus of
the sculpture’s design.
“This was a couple who came to
pose for me. He was a Vietnam
vet who had cancer from Agent
Orange,” Waddell said. “This
sculpture demands that we pay
more attention to the
conservation of our environment.
This grouping is in contrast to
the next grouping called
Celebration.”
Celebration is a seven-figure,
larger-than-life-size bronze
ensemble, illustrating an
elderly man appearing to conduct
a chorus of seven other figures,
men, women and children, who are
approaching him. The child is
balanced on the shoulders of a
woman, while another woman
assists. A third woman runs from
behind while a man, just a few
steps ahead of her, reaches back
to welcome her approach.
For Waddell, this sculpture
demonstrates the sum of his
beliefs.
“Striding, forward-leaning
figures and outstretched arms
project active, life giving
energy and loving interaction
between the generations: a
celebration of how great human
beings can be,” he said. “Each
individual is precious because
of the unique way they can
contribute to society. When
people are not thought of and
treated as individuals, society
suffers in direct proportion to
the neglect of that concept.”
Waddell said this grouping and
its total composition was the
most difficult combination of
human form that he has done,
even more so than his 12-figure
piece, Dance, located at the
Herberger Theater in Phoenix. He
compares the grouping to Rodin’s
Burghers of Calais due to its
complexity of composition.
Although the figures are
different in character, like
Rodin, Waddell stays faithful to
his subjects’ nature without
idealizing their form.
Last in the sculpture garden is
the Circle of Womanhood. This
grouping is made up of four
figures, three which are
reclining around a pregnant
mother and her child. The pieces
are positioned to overlook the
amphitheater and vista of
Sycamore Canyon.
“This is a timely piece because
in a time when women are
concerned about the protection
of child and mother, I wanted to
do something that is all about
women and the necessity of the
protection of the child and
mother herself. I wanted to
demonstrate also the beauty of
individual differences and the
spiritual nature of childbirth,
rearing and the whole process of
motherhood.”
All three groupings are on loan
to the Sedona Cultural Park. The
park seeks a purchaser.
Sedona Cultural Park Director
Dan Schay said that having the
grouping of sculptures in the
park helps the park fulfill its
mission of celebrating human
creativity in all of its forms
in an extraordinary setting.
“What is really telling about
John’s work is there is a real
dialogue between the work itself
and its setting. It’s not just a
bunch of sculptures plunked
down. There is something that is
aesthetically very exciting
about it.”
Waddell said that he hopes that
while we enjoy the play of light
upon the human forms and the
patterns of movement and air
among the figures, we will be
infused with a reverence for the
many faceted strengths of all of
us; the beauty of individual
differences.