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Beauty is fleeting

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Thursday, Feb. 13, 2014 11:51 PM
STEVE LEWIS/Durango Herald - Keith Martin said the tallest snow sculpture he's worked on was 19 feet tall. The smallest about two feet.
STEVE LEWIS/Durango Herald - "The idea is that you process the snow, heat it up, and then pack it into your form as...best that you can, so you get that really nice, tight snowball feel," said snow and ice carver Keith Martin.
STEVE LEWIS/Durango Herald - Dean Martin, Keith Martin's six-year-old Great Dane, watches as Martin starts in on a snow sculpture of a puppy recently at his Durango home.
STEVE LEWIS/Durango Herald - "If it falls down when it's in clay, it absolutely won't hold up in snow," said snow and ice carver Keith Martin. Martin said his creations always start out as clay models to help him and his team visualize the sculpture.
STEVE LEWIS/Durango Herald - Snow carver Keith Martin says he has around a hundred hand tools for sculpting snow. Martin said he made half of them himself and almost all of his store-bought tools have been altered in some way to meet his needs.
STEVE LEWIS/Durango Herald - Keith Martin's snow sculpture of a puppy begins to take shape, bearing a resemblance to Martin's six-year-old Great Dane, Dean Martin.
STEVE LEWIS/Durango Herald - Keith Martin's six-year-old Great Dane, Dean Martin, tries to stay awake while Martin works on a snow sculpture recently at his Durango home.
STEVE LEWIS/Durango Herald - Snow and ice carver Keith Martin said he started ice carving in culinary school back in 1996. Martin said his love of snow carving came later in 2001 when he took a job as a chef in Breckenridge across the street from the site of an international snow sculpture event.
STEVE LEWIS/Durango Herald - Snow carver Keith Martin said snow sculpting competitions only allow the use of hand tools. Martin said he has around a hundred of them, half of which he made himself.
STEVE LEWIS/Durango Herald - Keith Martin works on a snow sculpture recently at his Durango home.
STEVE LEWIS/Durango Herald - "I love the idea that it's all temporary art," said snow and ice carver Keith Martin, who sculpted a puppy out of snow during a recent demonstration at his durango home.
STEVE LEWIS/Durango Herald - Keith Martin finishes up a snow sculpture recently at his Durango home.
STEVE LEWIS/Durango Herald - Keith Martin's six-year-old Great Dane, Dean Martin, with Martin's new snow sculpture.
STEVE LEWIS/Durango Herald - Keith Martin and his six-year-old Great Dane, Dean Martin, pose with Martin's puppy sculpture recently at his Durango home.

When Michelangelo looked at a massive block of marble, he saw the David waiting within it. When Durangoan Keith Martin looks at a 26-ton block of compacted snow, he sees a family tubing, a woolly mammoth, a 19-foot-tall violin player, or an undersea diver in a cave with an octopus floating overhead.

Martin, whose interest in snow sculpture began while living across the street from the venue of the Breckenridge International Snow Sculpting Competition, is fresh off a gold-medal win in the competition that started it all for him about 12 years ago.

It was his sixth try at the competition, fifth on Team Breckenridge and fourth as team captain. The first year he competed with Team Germany, which won the bronze medal.

“I feel very privileged to sculpt with these people,” Martin said, “and it’s a huge honor that Team Breckenridge thinks enough of me to say they want me as the team leader. Breckenridge is kind of the Olympics of snow sculpting.”

The art form appeals to him in many ways.

“I love playing in snow,” he said. “I like living in a snowy climate. I like that it’s temporary art.”

Martin began with an advantage – he learned ice sculpting in culinary school and had used it while working as a chef for a number of years. But sculpting in snow, as opposed to ice, comes with some unique challenges.

The technique

Martin starts with scale clay models of the sculptures he wants to create.

“If it falls down in clay, it won’t hold up in snow,” he said. “And it takes the concept from inside my head and shows the other sculptors the detail. Then it’s connect the dots.”

Because it generally is so warm in La Plata County in the winter, Martin works only in clay here. But he’s learned a lot about what works and what doesn’t, some from more experienced teammates and some from experience.

“There’s a lot of science, a lot of engineering,” he said. “You want a nice snowball feel because that’s what allows us to defy gravity.”

The team begins by carving off big blocks of snow the first day of what generally is a 60- to 65-hour allowed sculpting time in a competition.

“The more open you get the big block, the colder it gets overnight, the easier it is to sculpt the next day,” Martin said. “On the last night, we sculpt all night long, right up to the 10 a.m. stop time.”

A typical Durangoan, Martin’s day jobs include running a handyman business, rehabbing trailers and cooking at a hunting lodge in Idaho for two months a year. His handiness allows him to make many of his own sculpting tools, including chisels and scrapers, which he uses along with saws, and brushes. It’s not unusual for him to give away 10 or more tools to fellow snow sculptors at competitions.

Highlights and hazards

“This has taken me half way around the world,” Martin said. “I went to Sapporo, Japan, in 2007. The competition there is huge, covering about 16 city blocks, literally about the size of Durango. Some of the ice structures there are larger than any buildings we have here.”

Martin will leave this week for Loveland for the state snow-sculpting competition before going to work with Team Yukon in Canada, where he’s looking forward to seeing the northern lights.

“I want to travel, see the world, enjoy the food,” he said.

He almost got to go to Iceland once and is hoping to compete in Switzerland, Germany and Italy some day.

But it’s the Asian teams you have to beat, he said, especially the teams from Mongolia, two of which were at Breckenridge.

“They intimidate me,” he said. “Their level of detail is amazing. We were lucky they like whiskey and were a little tipsy the last night.”

Because he generally gets to participate in only about three competitions a year, it’s hard to get the practice in to achieve that kind of detail, he said.

“I’m getting better as I do it, but I’m still better at fat people, puffy jackets, hairy dogs – those kind of things are easier for me,” Martin said.

And snow is such a fragile medium.

“Sometimes, when you’re a racer, you fall down,” he said. “Sometimes, when you’re a snow sculptor, the snow falls down on you. I’ve had it fall down before judging, as they’re judging and right after judging. One time, a team had the ear of a cat just fall off right in front of the judges. It happens.”

One of his biggest challenges came on a sculpture he did of an underwater cave.

“I slipped off one of the arms of the octopus and broke off one of the arms of the scuba diver,” he said. “While everyone else went into lunch, we managed to mount at least 75 pounds of snow back on so you couldn’t tell.”

Sometimes, something almost magical happens.

“One time, I put a little snowflake on a dog’s nose,” he said, “and it melted some the first couple of days, then lasted two weeks.”

He has hopes of working with major ski resorts or perhaps the X-Games tour, and a gold medal at Breckenridge will go a long way in reaching that goal.

Martin also would love to do more snow sculpting here, but the weather just isn’t conducive, he said.

“We’d have to figure out a way to work it, maybe with a refrigerated building because Mother Nature is not going to play with us,” he said.

One sculpture he did at the Leland House lasted a couple of minutes before it toppled, and some at Durango Mountain Resort stayed standing only a couple of days – although he’s quick to point out they allowed kids to climb on them.

“But kids are the coolest thing about the whole event,” Martin said. “They still have the imagination to see what we’re doing. They walk up and see it long before the adults do.”

abutler@durangoherald.com

How to create a snow sculpture

The steps may sound simple, but sculpting in snow takes creativity, engineering and science. Keith Martin shares a how-to for those who want to give it a try:
Create a concept. Martin likes to make a clay model to give him a scale 3-D representation.
Gather and compact snow to create the raw block. It’s ideal to collect it 24 hours in advance, so the snow can melt a little and refreeze, making it easier to sculpt.
Chop off the snow that will not be part of the final sculpture. Allow the remainder to freeze overnight so the interior of the block freezes more thoroughly.
Rough-in the shape of the final sculpture.
Carve-in the details and fine touches.
Visit www.snowandicecarving.com to learn more about Keith Martin and his snow sculpting adventures.

11 Images

Durangoan Keith Martin led Team Breckenridge, which won the gold medal at the Breckenridge International Snow Sculpting Competition at the end of January with this sculpture of a family going tubing. His team beat competitors from as far away as Mongolia and Estonia.
Snow carver Keith Martin said snow sculpting competitions only allow the use of hand tools. He has around 100 tools, about half of which he made himself, and he takes as many as will fit in his carryon or, for road trips, his Jeep.
“I love the idea that it’s all temporary art,” said snow and ice carver Keith Martin, who sculpted a puppy out of snow in about 20 minutes during a recent demonstration at his Durango home. He is fresh off winning the gold medal at a recent international competition in Breckinridge.
Keith Martin’s snow sculpture of a puppy begins to take shape, bearing an uncanny resemblance to Martin’s 6-year-old Great Dane, Dean Martin.
Keith Martin said the tallest snow sculpture he has created was 19 feet tall, with the smallest about 2 feet in height.
Snow sculptor Keith Martin says he has about 100 hand tools for sculpting snow. Martin said he made half of them himself, and almost all of his store-bought tools have been altered in some way to meet his needs.
“The idea is that you process the snow, heat it up, and then pack it into your form as ... best that you can, so you get that really nice, tight snowball feel,” said snow and ice sculptor Keith Martin as he removed the mold from snow he collected at Cascade earlier that morning. Martin and his team just won the gold medal in snow sculpting at the Breckenridge International Snow Sculpting Competition.
Dean Martin, Keith Martin’s 6-year-old Great Dane, watches as Martin demonstrates the art of snow sculpture while creating a puppy recently at his Durango home. Dean didn’t seem too intimidated by the canine interloper.
“If it falls down when it’s in clay, it absolutely won’t hold up in snow,” said snow and ice sculptor Keith Martin. He said his creations always start out as clay models like this one of the puppy he built Wednesday. The models are built to scale to help him and his team visualize the final sculpture.
Keith Martin’s clay model of a puppy was created as an homage to his 6-year-old Great Dane, Dean Martin. Martin used the model as a guide for a snow sculpture.
Snow and ice carver Keith Martin said he started ice carving in culinary school in 1996. Martin said his love of snow carving came later, in 2001, when he moved to Breckenridge and lived across the street from the site of the Breckenridge International Snow Sculpting Competition. He won the gold medal at the competition at the end of January.
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