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News
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| Richard Cornelius is shown
in his woodworking studio near Pickrell. Cornelius began
creating hand carved doors and mantles 14 years ago in Wyoming
and has recently moved to the Pickrell area, where his parents
were born and raised. Photo by Joelyn Hansen/Daily Sun
staff |
Carving a new path
By Joelyn Hansen/Daily Sun staff
writer Saturday, August 25, 2007 1:34 AM
CDT
Richard Cornelius' small woodcarving
studio can be seen from miles away as it sits quietly atop a small
grassy hill just south of Pickrell at 710 W. Dogwood
Road.
Inside the studio, Cornelius spends hours a day,
listening to music and occasionally glancing out the window onto
either the vast prairie land or town of Pickrell in the distance, as
he delicately carves away piece by piece of a large wooden door to
create an original design.
“We're up on this hill because
we've got the great view,” Cornelius said.
A year ago,
Cornelius and his wife decided to move to rural Pickrell where his
parents were born and raised. He then built a house for him and his
wife, his father and a studio for his work.
His father, Lee,
who is 95, who left the area in the 1940s, can still remember the
days when he lived in Pickrell as a boy, including riding the train
down to Beatrice every day for school.
Living in Nebraska has been great for
Cornelius, he said. He truly enjoys the countryside and the people
who live in the area.
Cornelius started his business creating
hand carved doors and mantles 14 years ago in Wyoming, he
said.
Holding degrees in fine arts and anthropology from
Metropolitan State College and Fort Lewis College, both in Denver,
Colo., and Washington State University, Cornelius worked as a
contract field archeologist for different companies in many parts of
the west including Washington, Montana, New Mexico, Arizona and
Utah.
His duties included searching for artifacts in areas
where pipelines were to be built. He also worked as an exhibits
director of the San Juan County Archaeological Research Center and
Library in Salmon Ruin in Bloomfield, N.M.
But he decided he needed a new path in
life and hand carving doors and mantles was an opportunity he
relished.
“I always had a background and interest in art,” he
said. “I figured (the door) was a big beautiful canvas.”
Over
the years, he had worked as a freelance artist and illustrator
producing archeological illustrations, graphics and cast artifact
replicas, but Cornelius had little experience carving
wood.
Nevertheless, he taught himself the reductive process
of wood carving, carving the wood away until you come to your final
image or design.
Each door or mantle designed by Cornelius is
unique in its own way as they tell a story of the door's owner. He
works with the different customers to come up with the idea or
design for their door or mantle.
Cornelius said clients will
often give him a theme or idea of what they would like to see carved
on their door.
“The best carvings are the ones that people
take an interest in,” he said.
For example, Cornelius has
carved doors with landscapes the client is often greeted with as
they look out their picture window or animals they have often been
associated with.
“Each door is kind of custom designed for
clients based on their needs and wants,” he said.
Because of
the detail from clients, Cornelius said he often gets to really know
people as he finds out about what interests them, such as their
hobbies or where they live.
There are times when Cornelius
relies on some of his own experiences to add detail to his carvings,
however. Often when the client first mentions what they want, his
mind is already thinking about images he has seen in his own
life.
Once the doors are carved, Cornelius then finishes the
piece with a natural look or with colored stains to accentuate
specific design and carving techniques.
He can spend up to
two weeks, sometimes longer, carving a door, he said. This year he
plans to carve anywhere from 17 to 22 doors, he
said.
Cornelius has hand carved doors, mantles, furniture and
mirror frames for many different people around the United States. In
his 14 years of door carving, he has created 170 doors, he said.
With each one, he likes the last one he did the best.
“You
better be happy with the last one,” he said. “Then, on the other
hand, you better find some problems so that you can attack the next
one with an attitude to do better.”
Cornelius said it is
crucial to be satisfied and non-satisfied with your
work.
“There should always be an element of fear when
creating something worthwhile,” he said. “You push yourself, you
want the next door or the next project to be the best it can
be.”
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