Reliquary #2

Process and final reliquary

Reliquary for My Father

In January of 2017, the day before my 50th birthday, my Father passed away. It was the beginning of a year of intense loss and grief as my Mother followed in October, my dog in November and my cat in December.

My Parents were very creative people which was passed down to all of their 5 children in one way or another. Dad was an industrial arts teacher and a wood worker for over 3 decades. Mid-career, he took up farrier work as a side business. My life has been full of materials, tools and projects, both practical and creative.

In the wake of their deaths, I took part in disassembling their 60 years of life together, gathering small items from their home, items that had personal meaning to me. As I sat with these items, I knew I did not want to simply keep them in boxes, instead dreaming up ways to display them. This would require skills I did not have.

This prompted me to return to my sculpture background and enrollment in classes at Baltimore Jewelry Center where I fell in love with metalsmithing.

Made from items gathered from my Father’s desk.

  • One of his watch bands

  • A portion of his suspenders

  • A portion of his leather jack knife holder

  • A portion of his folding ruler

  • A plastic mold of the inside of my father’s ear (used to create his hearing aid).

  • Hearing aid batteries

  • A piece of one of his harmonicas

  • A lock of his hair, gathered from his last haircut which I gave him about a month before his death

  • Copper sheet metal

From Memory to idea to Tribute

I am proud of the two reliquaries I created. They came in on a mist, coming to fruition with time, grief and learning.

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Reliquary #1

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Earle Necklace