HomeMy WebLinkAboutClark Mundy Salmon's Gift
For many hundreds of years, human life thrived on the Pacific Northwest Coast
amongst a grand abundance of salmon.
As primary food and foundation of community life, the salmon has always been
highly revered in Northwest tribal culture, becoming family to the people, and a
deeply sacred bearer of both immortality and wealth.
Native tradition teaches that rightful honoring of salmon as life-source brings
prosperity, and today the bones of each spring's earliest harvested salmon
continue to be returned to the river in the tribes' "First Salmon Ceremony."
The Salmon's incredible and arduous life journey can cover thousands of miles—
first as fry traveling downriver to smolt, then out to sea for 1 to 5 years as adults,
and finally as spawners pressing upstream with resolve toward their birthplace.
When both male and female salmon return from the nutrient-rich ocean to their
home river to reproduce and die, their decaying bodies nourish the entire
watershed, fortifying the forest web that supports not only us humans but
hundreds of species. Ancient recyclers, Salmon teach us that we can't have birth
without death, and that all life is connected—when salmon thrive, so do we. What
a gift they are to us!
I've lived on the North Olympic Peninsula of Washington State for most of my 64
years. Now the historic removal of the Elwha River Dams near our home is
allowing the wild salmon to return to their ancient spawning grounds for the first
time in 100 years. Much of my current work celebrates the return of the
legendary Elwha Chinooks to their freed river, and honors the restoration of the
Elwha watershed and our nearshore—which will in turn revitalize our community,
the Elwha Klallarn Tribal culture, and the growth of our region.
I am excited to witness the beginnings of this rebirth, and find myself in a time of
new possibilities, too. I am ever grateful for the phenomonal support of my local
community in building a strong foundation for my copper work.
Salmon's gift to us is so big, and so vital to our common survival. My native
friends have taught me that the human spirit and the spirit of salmon are one,
indivisible. I hope that my hand-hammered copper salmon will inspire you to
honor that bond, and that the Spirit of Salmon will bring you prosperity.With, ratitude,
With,
Cl r Mundy
CLARK MUNDY
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Copper and Wood
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Clark Mundy is a native of the west Olympic Peninsula
who has resided in the foothills near Port Angeles, WA
since 1979. A boyhood spent in the woods and on the
water sparked his creativity early on, and his love of the
natural world has continued to inspire a wide variety of art
forms throughout his 60 years. These have ranged from
painting, photography, building, woodworking, printmaking, ,
and copper sculpture.
As a teenager, Clark was inspired by his grandfather to paint, and his watercolors were shown in several western
Washington locations. His love of building then spurred him into many years' work in every aspect of construction, from
operating heavy equipment to fine woodworking, including a stint in the boatbuilding industry.
In the 90's Clark crafted hundreds of unique handmade boxes from several species of salvaged northwest wood, including
Western Red Cedar, Alaska Yellow Cedar, & Pacific Yew.
In 2000, Clark was invited to study Northwest Native woodcarving with Al Charles Jr and Darrell Charles Jr of the Lower
Elwha Klallam Tribe. Collaborative works with these artists are on display around the Pacific Northwest, including "Elwha
Return," a mixed-media piece in the lobby of the Clallam County Courthouse, which the three artists created to support the
conservation goals joining the North Olympic Land Trust, local governments, and the people of the region. To find out
more about the Courthouse Art Project, which to date has gathered over $30,000 for local preservation work, visit
www.northolympiclandtrust.org.
Clark's primary medium of expression today is copper, being drawn to its ancient associations and malleable qualities.
Favorite subjects are the fish and sea life native to Northwest waters, especially the legendary Elwha River Chinook
salmon. Self taught, Clark hammers the copper into releif from the reverse side with a technique called "repousse,"
(French for "pushed back") heating and working each piece many times to reach the desired shape. He finishes with a
torched and/or traditional oxidized patina, which is usually protected by a tough automotive topcoat for outside placement.
Clark is one of a few copper artists who still creates each piece freehand. Much "hand-hammered"copper available today
is produced using a mold, which takes far less time.
Clark's work is easily viewed around Port Angeles. In 2008 he installed twenty-one copper salmon swimming up the spiral
staircase inside the Landing Mall on the Port Angeles waterfront, an upstream journey which culminates in a seven-foot
high salmon sculpture on the 2nd floor. Enitled "The Gift," Clark's river of salmon art project honors the Spirit of Salmon,
and to the continued vitality and natural beauty of the Olympic Peninsula.
In 2010 Clark teamed up with Tom Rankin of ONA Landscaping to create a 9-ft copper fountain sculpture with cedar
bench & the planter for the Great Hall of the new Lower Elwha Klallam Heritage Center at First and Peabody Streets in
Port Angeles. Named "Elwha: Journey Home," this art installation celebrates the return of the wild salmon runs to their
ancient spawning grounds on the Elwha River. Clark's hammered copper accents adorn the building's inside pillars, and it
was a special honor to create the copper welcome masks above the Center's entrance, which were designed by Al
Charles Jr. from old Coast Salish tradition.
2011 produced a 20 foot sign and sculpture for the Feiro Marine Life Center entrance on City Pier in Port Angeles. Called
"Lucy and the Welcome Crab," this copper and stainless steel installation features a giant Pacific octopus, Chinook
Salmon and Dungeness Crab. Inside the Feiro stands a floor to ceiling cedar story pole & bench called "Kindred Spirits,"
which Clark created to honor Art Feiro and Will Wirt, the men whose shared vision brought the Marine Center into being.
Most recently, Clark created a series of large copper masks and lampshades for the Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe's campus
in Rlyn, WA. Three-dimensional sculpture, including signs, lampshades, weathervanes, fountains, and wall compositions
are his passion now. Sculptures may be combined with carved cedar, abalone, and/or stone to create mixed media
pieces. Custom work is welcome, and no vision is too big or too small—your imagination inspires!
You can find Clark on the web at both coppersalmon.com and facebook.com/clark.mundy, by phone at 360-912-1193, or
by email to illfc_ )ppQrfia ma D..Q.QL% Thank you for your interest!
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MW
honored I am r° s y hand-hammered copper
salmon as a gift to be presented from o l of Port
Angeles to the l of Mutsu City. As a life-long
resident the Olympic Peninsula, my heart jumps up to
see the return of the salmon to the l River near
Port Angeles, and I can think of no better symbol of the
prosperity t t comes from inter-relationship of all
peoples all life. "rhis Elwha Chinook has Coast st s lis
crescents and a human face, reminding us that the
human spirit the it it of salmon arY d It is called
"Seven rati s," asking s to i f l of both the
Est and the r° s nt in o
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