Hawkins
Bolden (September 16, 1914 - January 18, 2005)
We first met Hawkins Bolden in 1990
when he lived with his sister Elizabeth. She was a piece
of work all on her own having the gift of story-telling.
She would capture our attention for hours with stories
of the Bolden family history and her own colorful past.
Hawkins lost his eyesight at age eight
following a blow to the head. He had already shown signs
of epilepsy and the blow to the head pushed his body
over the edge. Along with blindness he grew up suffering
seizures which during a large portion of his lifetime
was regarded as mental illness. But Hawkins has always
been a resourceful and creative person. Relying entirely
on his sense of touch he has made visual/tactile art
for most of his life. He also has the engineering abilities
to build radios from the simplest of materials. Hawkins
has always enjoyed gardening. It is the act of planting,
weeding, and experience of feeling the plants grown
that he enjoys. With the patience of a Buddhist monk,
Hawkins will cut the grass of his yard with a razor
blade.
Bolden gathers a variety of discarded objects to assemble
scarecrows, guardian figures, and abstract assemblages
to protect his own backyard
garden. He uses various objects as flaps to serve as
tongues; and he also punctures holes in the pieces to
serve as eyes. He starts this process with a drill and
then uses handmade tools to work the holes larger and
perfect to fill his needs.
Hawkins creates all of his pieces as figures to “keep
away the birds”, but Bolden’s pieces follow
classic Congo culture in the theme of “motion-emblems”
such as wheels,hubcaps, tires, hoops, and pinwheels
being used to enhance the yard with gestures of protection
and enrichment, thus guarding the owner of the house
and yard; but we have know Hawkins and his family for
the past 10 years and Hawkins has never referred to
his pieces as anything expect pieces to “keep
away birds”.
When he first met Hawkins his pieces were more simplistic
with one or two surfaces containing “eyes”
and “tongues”. Hawkins is aware of interest
in his “scarecrows” and he gets enjoyment
in this. He values his own pieces more and more, challenging
himself to make the pieces more complex. The current
pieces are amazing assemblages of multiple surfaces,
many eyes and tongues, binding with wire, and arranged
on a central surface.
Hawkins loved locking himself in his room of the house,
beginning to hum old hymns, and entering his own world
of creating scarecrows to keep away the birds.
January 18, 2005 Hawkins who had not been ill, went
to take a nap and just did not wake up. A perfect ending
to such a powerful man's life. We will greatly miss
his kind soul.
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