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Excerpt:
…Although generally a solitary man, Blagdon loved his
extended family and made toys and bicycles for his nieces
and nephews who often visited. His sisters regularly
brought him goods, and the family was supportive of
him even though his life was markedly different from
their own. A life-long farmer, his father had been a
role model for his children. Having no use for idle
hands, on summer evenings and during the long winters
he would practice the craft of tatting. With coarse
thread looped and knotted with a hand-shuttle, he created
various table or chair coverings, decorative but sturdy
items to adorn the home or church. Blagdon's sisters
took up crocheting, and Blagdon himself took to working
with baling wire, making individual items he referred
to as 'pretties'. With just his hands and a pair of
needle-nose pliers, he bent and curved the metal strands
into squares filled with circles or other web-like forms.
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Blagdon also began drawing and painting. Sketching with
pencil on cardboard or wood, he painted fields of colour
in geometric or circular patterns. As he became more
avidly involved in painting and in making his wire pretties,
he also began to transform his house, painting abstract
dotted patterns on the light bulbs and large concentric
rings of colour on the kitchen ceiling. At yard sales
he gathered anything from discarded cans of paint to
rolls of wire or a cast-off television. The materials
that captivated him had roots in the natural world:
magnets, copper wire, glass, and even leaves, sand and
butterfly wings. Described as kind, gentle and highly
sensitive by family and friends alike, Blagdon was innately
attuned to the world around him - a fact that would
play an increasingly important role in the art he made.
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