Lögberg-Heimskringla - 26.09.2003, Blaðsíða 4

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 26.09.2003, Blaðsíða 4
page 4 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • Friday, 26 September 2003 ÍIMItI MfíKlIifellBT] This column recognizes people of Icelandic descent who have made or are making a contribution to ihe lcelandic/North American community. Please let us know ifthere is someone you would like to see featured. Contact (204) 284-5686 or email us at logberg@mts.net Val Dempsey Valgardson Teaches the “Coolest Class in the Country” Val created this bench of walnut and cherry wood, for the Brooks Museum in Memphis, TN Dilla Narfason Gimli, MB Summer time is a good time to travel and one destina- tion for Val Dempsey Valgard- son and his family was Gimli. Here they spent a few days with his grandparents, Ree and Dempsey Valgardson and also his father Bill, who happened to be visiting from Victoria, BC. While talking with Val I discovered that his goal in life was to be an artist. He took classes at the University of Victoria where he obtained a Bachelor in Fine Arts. What interested him the most were the professors and classes in kinetic sculpture. Because expression of his ideas through three-dimen- sional creations was what-he liked best, he furthered his education at the University of Califomia in San Diego. There he received his Masters in Fine Arts. He now teaches at Rhodes College in Memphis, TN, a private Liberal Arts college of approximately 1500 students. As a sculptor, I assumed that Val would be working in clay or stone or some such medium that we associate with sculpture. Yes, he did create a bench of wood which was commissioned by the Brooks Museum in Memphis. Of the many submissions, four were chosen, including Val’s pro- posal. Val was chosen to cre- ate the bench. The bench, he explains, was a rounded, four-sided bench. He used walnut wood alternating with cherry wood, 250 pieces, 4” x 4” x 26,” glued and formed into one flowing piece of art that was also comfortable to sit on. It was well received as a unique creation for the museum. Other projects, far more to his liking, are much more con- temporary. They conjure up images one does not usually envision. He describes this as working with kinetics, sculp- turing and electronics. This may have had its beginning while he was in San Diego when he became aware of cockroaches scurrying here and there, but not really wel- comed everywhere. So he built a box to put them in. The box is at the centre of a sculp- ture and the movement of the cockroaches moves the sculp- ture around the room. A more serious endeavour, as Professor Harold Cohen’s research assistant, he built a plotter arm for a computer that makes its own decision about what to paint and then paints it. The research and creation of this arm took four years. When it was completed Val and his wife Kristin took it to the Computer Museum in Boston where they displayed it to the public. For a show in Memphis, he created a machine which was located in a corridor where a person could enter and walk toward the machine. For each step the person took, the machine moved backwards. As the person retreated, the machine advanced. The work was entitled, ”Two Step.” A similar machine was given the title “Polka” since it performed the polka step as it read the infrared from the per- son interacting with it. For the Children’s Museum in Mem- phis, he constructed a machine and greenhouse where a plant began to grow sideways and Krave’s Candy Co. 45 Durand Road Winnipeg, MB, R2J 3T1 Phone: (204) 654-1361 Toll Free: 1 (800) 357-6867 Larry Finnson Chris Emery then made its way upward when it found a minute space to grow through. It was Val’s desire to also mystify the par- ents so he named this creation “A Bricoleur’s Investigation of the Locus of Control Through Negative Reinforce- ment.” For a juried art show, Val created a structure whereby a Bonsai tree would be automat- ically watered when required and the tree would be automat- ically trimmed so that it was always in a cube shape. This entry he called “One Life to Live.” Another entry was named “As the World Turns” and here an automated hedge trimmer was programmed to come out of its station and trim the hedge and then return to its station again. At the College Val has also been involved in team teach- ing a course with a teacher from the physics department. The students must produce autonomous robots. They can put their credits for their robot toward either arts or physics in their regular course work. Minnist Remember BETEL í ERFÐASKRÁM YÐAR Please send Donations to: BETEL HOME FOUNDATION BOX 10 96 lstAvenue Girnli, MB ROC ÍBO This has become a fun course to take and was written up as “one of the coolest classes in the country” in the Chronicle ofHigher Education. Obviously Val’s sculptur- ing has developed into many interesting art forms, both in his teaching and in his individ- ual works. These futuristic (or maybe not so futuristic) cre- ations would make for an interesting show. Val met his wife Kristin Siemens in British Columbia. His father, W.D. Valgardson, through the typical questions about family, discovered that Kristin comes from the Julius family of Selkirk, MB and therefore would be related to the renowned poet K.N. Julius of North Dakota. In Val’s case, he was named after Bill’s great uncle, Valentinus Valgardson who was also a teacher for many years in Moose Jaw, SK. Val and Kristin have two children, Jordan five years and Holly three years. Single Family Home in Orlando Florida 3 bedroom house owned by lcelanders in a gated community on a golf course in Orlando for rent on a 2 weeks or longer basis. Shorter stays can be negotiated. Favorable prices. There are openings in Sept/Oct. 2003. Contact: annette@venturaresorts.com or call: 1 800-247-8417 or 407-273-8770 ext. #108 and refer to: C06572 For discount refer to advertisment in Lögberg-Heimskringla _____"l Jjtie'and www.icelandnaturally.com Visit our website to Visit us on the web at http://www.logberg.com

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