Reclaimed steel and antique wood furniture transformed into soulful horse head contemporary western horse sculpture.
Read MoreHand Built Horse Head Sculpture
Tolley Marney's new horse head sculpture, Lyrical Spirit is a steel and wood sculpture that balances the heavy solidity of wood and steel with open and activated spaces that interweave from every angle. This is a stunning sculpture.
Read MoreHorse Sculpture Forged from Steel and Layered with Antique Oak
Reclaimed antique wood furniture and reclaimed steel horseshoes combine in this beautiful horse sculpture by renowned western artist and blacksmith, Tolley Marney. His artistic process is completely freehand, thus, no two sculptures are the same.
Read MoreTolley's New Horse Head Sculpture of a Stallion
Contemporary horse head sculpture of a stallion by western artist, Tolley Marney, titled Fortitude. Hand built with blacksmithing techniques and antique wood inlay.
Read MoreCreating a Sculpture is a Whirlwind Courtship
I create horse sculptures because I’ve interacted with horses all of my life, so I understand the horse and feel a comfort working with its image. The horse is a kindred spirit. Horses are creatures that will do anything in the world for us as long as we ask in the right way.
Read MoreHorse Courtship Romantic Horse Art Metal Sculpture
Art, the owner of First Gallery in Rancho Mirage, California is a man with an eye for art and design. He has owned a custom frame shop for decades and recently moved to a beautifully spacious and light-filled location. He is featuring several of Tolley's steel sculptures this season in the atrium gallery.
Be sure to stop in and see Tolley's art. Art has quite the roster of exclusive collectors and you'll enjoy meeting him.
NOTE: First Gallery has closed. This sculpture has sold. You may commission Tolley to create a similar sculpture. Because he works without patterns, your sculpture will be unique to you.
Shop Sculpture Contact Tolley at 760-668-0809
The Devil Meets the Blacksmith
From the earliest of times, the Blacksmith has been the maker of anything steel. This is the tale of the Devil and the Blacksmith.
On a summer day the Blacksmith is tending his fire, getting ready for the day's work. The Blacksmith, a giant of a man with huge arms that effortlessly arc with every swing, was twisting and turning steel red from the heat of his forge. You could hear the ring of his anvil as steel twisted under his hammer.
The sound of the hammering and the ringing of anvil drew the attention of the Devil. On this summer day the Devil, had walked a long ways causing havoc with every step he took. As his journey slowed into the evening twilight, his fork-like feet became sore with his efforts. The blacksmith seemed like the answer to his problems.
I will have him form me a pair of shoes, steel shoes that will protect my fork-like feet, thought the Devil.
“Blacksmith,” says the Devil, “I need your attention, my feet are sore and I need a set of shoes built for me, NOW!”
The Blacksmith, hears the Devil with apprehension and fear, thinking, “I do not want to be known as the one who builds shoes for the devil, but I fear the rage that lies within him.”
So the Blacksmith agrees to build the Devil his shoes.
“Comeback tomorrow and I'll have them ready,” he says, “they will be like no other shoes you've ever seen before, they will be fantastic to see for all to see. Come back tomorrow and they will be ready for you.”
All the night you could hear his mighty blows against the anvil, as the Blacksmith formed the shoes for the devil. Great pride pounded into each swing of the hammer. Nothing less than perfect would leave his shop. All night the hammering went on and on. All night the fear of the Devil, lived inside the Blacksmith’s heart.
Morning came and with morning came the Devil.
“I’m here for the shoes you promised me,” says the Devil, ”now deliver or suffer the consequences and meet your fate.”
Without a stutter or a hesitation, the Blacksmith stepped up.
“I am ready for you Devil, your shoes are here. And as you can see they are nothing like anything else you’ve ever seen.”
The Devil, looks upon the shoes with the pride of gazing upon something new and wondurous.
“I can't wait, put them on now. I want everyone to see me and fear my step.
“Devil,” the Blacksmith says kindly, “would you please place your foot up upon the stand and I will nail each shoe to set it securely on your fork-like feet.”
Now the Devil, is known for wily tricks but this Blacksmith, had one of his own. The Blacksmith, took each shoe and placed it snugly upon the Devil’s foot and started to hammer the nails that hold the shoe against the foot. But he was holding the foot not in the way he would normally do, driving the nails into the horn of the foot. He reversed the nail to drive into the sole of the Devil’s feet. At first the Devil felt no pain, just a bit of soreness from the hammer.
“Now the job is done,” the Blacksmith says.
The Devil, looks upon his feet with pride.
“They are a bit sore,” says the Devil.
“Don't worry,” the Blacksmith replied, “the pain will go away. Just give it a day.” And then he sends the Devil on his way.
A day goes by and the Devil’s pain is great as each nail begins festering inside the horn of the foot. With each step and with each passing day, the Devil cries in pain as the festering deepens, turning his feet black with decay and white with puss.
But thevillagers only laugh at him in his pain. With all of his might the Devil cannot remove the shoes. Despite his efforts, he can’t find relief from the steps that await him. The shoes are firmly attached. Those shoes upon his feet promise pain with each step that awaits.
The Blacksmith, stokes up his fire. His hammer rings against his anvil bringing music to the Valley. The Devil doesn't approach the village, leaving it in peace and happiness. The Devil knows now to fear the Blacksmith.
So if you're ever looking for something to bring you good luck, look at a horseshoe that hangs above the Blacksmith’s shop. Hang it up with the ends at the top, so you don’t let the good luck run out. It is a warning to the Devil that a Blacksmith is about.
©Tolley Marney
Transformation
Hand forged steel horse sculpture titled, Transformation, by cowboy artist Tolley Marney. Sculpture is exhibited at Bellatora Gallery in Truckee, California. Call 530.386.2960 to purchase. Price is $5,800.00 plus shipping (includes crating and insurance). www.bellatoratruckee.com
Read MoreImages
Every day walking down the street we see images and these images transform our minds into joy, into hate, into sorrow. A world of the unknown possibilities awaits our eyes. Nature grants this gift to us.
No one on this planet will see images in the same way. There is no one who will see what I see and I shall not be able to trully see images through others eyes. When I see a beautiful painting that brings me joy but you see the same painting and it brings you sorrow, how shall one interpret this?
The image is here for both of us to experience but brings to each of us completely different emotions. So one of us must be wrong. It must be you that cannot see. Look at the painting can’t you see the gentle line and the beautiful colors? It brings me joy, but you say no, no, no, I still see the sorrow. Look at the darkness that intertwines with the lines and the color, this painting is obviously indicating sorrow.
Now we have found the meaning of art: there is no right there is no wrong, we surround our lives with images that bring us joy or sorrow and sometimes we just hated it. The images we saw yesterday will not mean the same to us today and will mean something us to tomorrow. We see this in a rose, one day it's a bud, next day a flower, and then next wilted away, Life is this way. So we are all an “Art Form” with images dancing in front of us to show us our way.
The World of Art is Changing
No longer will art we be identified with talent. What I'm saying here is that the world of computers is making the technicians the artists of the day. The average art viewer does not know the difference between a painting or sculpture that was painfully developed by hand in real time by an artist who their studied craft for years.
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