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Smithsonian Folkways Recordings




Inspirations from the Forest
 


  
Introduction
Artistic Inspirations
Telling a Story
Passing it On
   Native Americans
   Keeping Traditions
   Leaving Legacies
Conservation
Next Steps
Exhibition Schedule

 

Related Links
Watch Rodney Richard carve with a chainsaw
Watch Jack Holcomb demonstrate sounds on his guitars

 

Whether passing on a family tradition or creating a new one, art made with natural materials can be a legacy for generations to come.

After many years of delicate carving and whittling, Rodney Richard adopted the chainsaw for carving large sculptures. He explains, "The chainsaw is just like a jackknife, only a really powerful one." Photo by Ed Gross.
A woodcarver since he was "a little shaver," Rodney Richard from Maine learned whittling from his father to make the toys his family could not afford. Richard spent most of his working life as a logger, creating small wooden curios as a hobby. He began chainsaw-carving later in life, but still whittles miniature bunnies to hand out as gifts. Carrying on the family tradition, his son, Rodney Richard, Jr., is also an accomplished woodcarver.

What Jack Holcomb loves about making guitars is that "you never know what it's going to sound like. When you put those strings on it and tighten it up and you hear it for the first time, it's like giving birth to a baby; it really is." Photo by Rebecca Summerour, Smithsonian Institution.
Jack Holcomb has made a professional career with the Forest Service in Georgia, but his passion is constructing guitars by hand; he spends at least 250 hours on each. He explains with pride how he can "take a bunch of flat pieces of wood and make an instrument out of it. . . . The thing I love about this is the legacy. I feel like I can leave something for my children and grandchildren. And if somebody takes care of this guitar, it should still be playing in fifty years or a hundred years, and I love that about it."

To construct his guitars, Jack Holcomb follows blueprints like these. Courtesy Guild of American Luthiers.

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