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magazine / ja05 / indepth
Green with jade
Birth of rock
CG gets elite sculptor's perspective on the precious
green stone.
Story by Jodi Di Menna
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Sculptors, such as Lyle Sopel or this artisan, Deborah Wilson
in her studio in Vernon, British Columbia, must learn to navigate jade's
hard properties to render polished and delicate pieces from its fibrous,
compact mass.
(Photo: Brooke McDonald) |
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From the rugged mountainside to the artist's studio, British Columbia
jade supports not only a mining industry but also an elite group of sculptors
who have mastered the gem. Lyle Sopel has been rendering birds, animals
and Buddhas from the precious green stone for over 25 years. CG got
his perspective.
CG: What are the qualities of jade that draw you to it?
LS: The translucency, the colour, the shine, the lustre. I think that
I was originally drawn to jade because of its historical significance.
There's a lot of mystical qualities and spiritual connections to the
stone, and that's very interesting to me.
CG: What was your initial reaction the first time you started
working with jade?
LS: The first time I heard the word 'jade' it was just so familiar to
me, it was as if it was my own name. It was like a soul connection, honestly.
When I first started [sculpting] it was amazement — the idea that
the stone was translucent and so beautiful when it was wet and so beautiful
to work with. It was my first opportunity to work with any kind of a
gem stone and I just immediately fell in love with it.
CG: How does jade challenge you?
LS: The hardness has to be it. That's the biggest thing as an artist
to get over. You're constantly challenged to create whatever your idea
might be in the material. It took me a number of years before I was capable
enough to express myself openly with the stone.
CG: What did you do to overcome the hardness?
LS: I had to find somebody that could make diamond tools and then I had
to instruct them on what kind of material I was carving and what hardness
it was. Then I had to come up with a method of polishing. I use a diamond
powder that I mix with Vaseline and floor wax. That gives me kind of
a pasty substance and I use that on a felt wheel. That originated with
the idea of using diamonds as a polishing compound, but how could I apply
it to the surface? My original thought was lipstick. I knew lipstick
had a pasty, oily texture to it, so I used to use that and I mixed the
diamond powder with lipstick. I'd get the weirdest looks in drug stores
when I'd try to buy lipstick for my polishing compounds!
CG: On a personal level, how do you overcome those challenges
in terms of maintaining your patience and precision?
LS: There again, it's overcoming the hardness of the stone and realizing
that you can only do so much. The tools will only cut so fast and the
surface will only smooth down so quickly, even if you do have the appropriate
tools. I think when I was younger, I would be anxious and in a hurry
to complete a piece, and also excited when it was complete. So that turned
out to be the time when I would most often break a piece. I'd get a delicate
thing, and I'd get excited that it's finally done and I'd make some terrible
error or drop it or bump it into a tool and I'd chip a corner or break
the piece entirely. I got over that through mental control. I just have
to bring myself back to a place of stillness or calmness and go forward
with a piece. So it became a mental exercise, or a type of meditation.
CG: Many of your sculptures are expressions of wildlife and
the natural environment. What is it about this subject matter that is
best captured with jade as a medium?
LS: I do like the idea that jade is from the earth and the animals walk
the earth. I like that thought. Also jade requires a certain approach
to it. In any other medium you can't get that same character — hard
line, shiny surface — you can't get that same expression as you
can with jade.
CG: You use jade from other parts of the world in your sculptures.
How does BC jade compare?
LS: It's really the best nephrite jade in the world. Best in terms of
quality and consistency and largeness of pieces. I don't think there's
any place in the world that you can get nephrite jade in such large boulders
as we can here. The jade is consistent throughout the boulder — it's
not fractured or off-colour. I also like to work with other jades that
are interesting. I like the black from Australia, just because of its
colour. It's just totally black. There's no other colouration in it at
all. And I do like Siberian white nephrite that's also very, very beautiful
because of its colour.
CG: Do you prefer jade from one BC jade mine over the other?
LS: Jade from the Polar Jade site has got the most vibrant colour and
it has really bright, bright chromium green spotting or lines in it.
That's an exciting piece of jade to work with because of that. When it's
finished, it's very lively and bright and translucent.
CG: You graduated from art school right around the time that
the jade industry was coming into its own. How significant have the jade
finds in B.C. been to the development of your career?
LS: Absolutely significant. That's how I developed as an artist. I think
I wouldn't be the same artist if I didn't have jade as a medium to work.
I think I've been very fortunate. I just happened to be very interested
in jade when it was available and I was young enough and I was able to
develop as a sculptor using a medium. I just happened to be in the right
place at the right time. So, if there's any truth to jade being the stone
of luck, I've had it.
CG: In B.C. jade prospectors and miners often work closely
with the artists. What's that relationship like?
LS: Of course we're different people. It takes different people to do
these two different things with the stone. You have to be adventurous
and rugged to go out to the mine sites. But that's also what I like.
I like the outdoors. I've been to the mine sites many times and I've
chosen the rock right from the mountainside.
CG: Does going up to the mine site and seeing the chunk of
rock being taken out of the ground help you relate to your medium?
LS: It's like the birth of the rock. That's where it comes from. There's
nothing like that, to see the rough rock being torn away from the mountainside.
And then you have the first cut and you see the colour inside of it and
you think 'that's so beautiful, I could make this or make that.' The
idea that it's from the earth is really exciting to me. The nature of
the stone is that it's metamorphic and it's been changed from one thing
to another thing. The earth made it, it created the stone to be this
way. And I just follow along with what the earth has already done. I
just take it a little bit further.
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