Grain-by-Grain (2): the amazing sand bottles of Andrew Clemens
Sand has always provided a medium, a muse, an inspiration in many ways, but
the way in which it inspired Andrew Clemens was extraordinary - and unique.
Clemens was born in Dubuque, Iowa, in 1852 (or 1857, reports vary), one of the
six sons of German and Prussian parents whose shipboard romance began as
immigrants to the U.S. His father was a locksmith and wagon-maker who moved the
family to McGregor, Iowa, to take advantage of the business provided by the
gold-rush and settlement of the west. At the age of five, Andrew was struck by
âbrain fever,â encephalitis as we now know it; lucky to survive, he lost his
hearing and speech. He was sent to the Iowa Institute for the Education of the
Deaf and Dumb in Council Bluffs, but as a young teenager he most enjoyed his
time in McGregor, working in his fatherâs business - and visiting Pictured
Rocks.
In what is today Pikes Peak State Park, the classic Paleozoic formations of
the central U.S. form bluffs and gullies along the Mississippi River, among them
the Ordovician St. Peter Sandstone. This classic sandstone is famously pure and
white, its well-rounded quartz grains providing the raw material for
glass-making and other applications. But at Pictured Rocks, waters percolating
down through the overlying limestones, charged with a variety of minerals, have
stained the St. Peter with a dazzling palette of natural colours (photo from
Iowa Geology 2001, 26, Iowa Department of Natural Resources).
Clemens
loved this place, and collected a spectrum of sand samples of subtly different
hues, greens, reds, browns, yellows, grays and blues. Back home, he would
carefully sort the grains by both colour and size, and then go to work. In
bottles of different sizes and types, he would, grain-by-grain, construct small
works of art. Using specially devised tools - fish hooks and wands made of
hickory - he would sort and position his fine-grained sands into, at
first, geometrical designs and later, as he developed his incredible craft,
meticulously detailed images (photos courtesy of the State Historical Society of
Iowa, Des Moines).
The image of George Washington on his horse is perhaps the
most famous, but the designs range from personalized greetings to dramatic
eagles, via ships, floral designs and documentation of local events, often with
words and mottoes. His pieces, of necessity, were constructed upside-down, each
bottle later sealed; he used no glue, no pigments, nothing except
naturally-coloured sand grains and his patience and genius. How many bottles he
made is unknown, for they are fragile and many have been broken over the years,
a work of art becoming just a pile of coloured sand on the floor. Indeed, for a
while Clemens worked at the South Side Museum in Chicago, constructing simple
designs as the public watched, which were then dramatically smashed with a
hammer to demonstrate that no magic was involved; understandably, Clemens did
not find this activity to his liking and soon returned home.
Clemensâs extraordinary skill and creativity became recognized, but only
modestly. The Editor of the North Iowa Times wrote in 1888 that âMcGregor has an
artist nowhere equaled in this world in his line of artistic work. He invented
and became skilled in an artistic work all unaided and alone. He invented and
made his own tools. He has thus brought to a surprising perfection an art of
which he alone is the inventor, the master. We refer to the pictures wrought
from sand from Pictured Rocks by Andrew Clemens. Our people do not properly
appreciate this art. The master doesnât seem to know its worth nor does he seem
to realize his exalted position among the inventors of the world. Mr. Clemens
lately completed what may be regarded as a masterpiece. He has made many fine
efforts before. This last one is a perfect picture of General Washington on
horseback. The artist has surpassed the copy, he gives the coloring, shadowing,
form, all complete and perfect and all done in sand. The work shows a
Mississippi River steamer running at full speed, a group of Indians in camp, the
flag of our country, fields, harvest scene, all perfect and wrought with natural
colored sands in a glass jar. The jar is open at the bottom and the work is
commenced at the top of the picture. But to appreciate this wonderful work one
must see it as we have seen it. It is one of the wonders of the age and ought to
have a place among the great art of the world.â
Clemens died, tragically young, in 1894, probably of tuberculosis. His
bottles had sold for fifty cents or a few dollars but today the survivors sell
for thousands.
(quotation and information from http://members.tripod.com/clipclop/andrew/,
a site which has detailed information and pictures of many of the surviving
works. For the geology of Pikes Peak State Park, and further material on
Clemens, see http://www.iowageology.org/gb70/stop-05.htm,
the source of the picture of Clemens, above). SIGNATURE
Comments
Matthew S. Moore (2010-04-26):
Good to see that Andrew Clemensâs extraordinary creations are getting a bit of publicity! DEAF LIFE Magazine is featuring a cover story about him, and I wager that it will come as a surprise to many of our readers. Until a bit ver a month ago, I didnât know about his story, either.
Kfreebir56 (2010-10-04):
I always love to learn something new, and learning about Andrew Clemens was inspireing. I think the art world should add him to their list of GREAT ARTIST!! If you want to learn about him, Google: Grain-by-Grain: the amazing sand bottles of Andrew Clemens. By the way, if you find one of his bottles, the Road Show just appraised one for about
$3,000.-$5,000.
David Graham (2011-02-15):
Just saw his works on Antiques Roadshow. I may not be âschooledâ in the fine arts, Mr. Clemensâ work is simply incredibly beautiful! I find his art to be the âcoolestâ thing I have seen in the last few decades, if not ever! My mother was a decent painter, but I have trouble drawing a stick figure. The talent and gift Andrew Clemens showed in his sand bottles is nothing less than amazing.
ANNE CLAYTON (2011-02-18):
i wish I could see just how he did these!! Incredible!!!
David Winter (2011-02-19):
Itâs Friday night Feb 18, 2011 and Iâm in Tallahassee, Fla. I also just saw the sand bottle work of Andrew Clemens on Antique Road Show and it is utterly amazing! As in amazing! It seems impossible but there it is! I couldnât refrain from looking him up and here I am. I guess Iâve seen a few sand bottles somewhere at sometime but I hardly knew this type of craft existed. Iâm searching for more words but I guess itâs just a what can you say type of thing. From what I read, Andrew Clemens was dealt blows early in life but he didnât stand down. Kudos Mr. Clemens!
Alexa Bradley (2011-02-21):
The work of this artist is exceptional. It is almost unbelievable, but I believe it! I had never heard of him until Antiques Road Show. Thank you to them for introducing Mr. Clemens to the public. I wish more people could see his work. This was an unusually gifted man who even posthumously is truly deserving of more publicity and recognition.
Kathy Hoover (2011-02-22):
I too watched the Antiques Roadshow from Des Moines, Iowa. Never heard of Clemens before. Was fascinated by his work. One week later, with my friend, we are doing our usual Goodwill, Salvation Army etc. End up in a building where several dealers have stuff. The owner buys estates and puts it on a shelf. YES! I sure did find one on the shelf. 100% certain itâs for real. Noone else on the planet could have done this work. Has between 10-11 different colors. Geometric work. Design flows with the actual pattern found on the bottle. Been reading everything on the web. Amazing man, brilliant artist. Taking it to the Iowa State Historical Building Tuesday, Feb. 22. Hereâs the kicker. Paid $3.99. My friend has been doing this sort of thing for years, me just a newbie. Iâm so excited. Get this, itâs not about how much itâs worth (I could use some cash) but rather having this piece of history entrusted to me.
Sandglass (2011-02-22):
Kathy - please follow up with a comment here after your visit - the suspense is killing me!
Michael
Kathy Hoover (2011-02-23):
Michael- I did take the bottle to Mike Smith the main curator at Iowa Historical Museum this afternoon. I live in West Des Moines. Took a friend to hold it while I drove. I was shaking inside. Was able to see Andrew Clemens exhibit while there. Mr. Smith had the aura of a curator. LOL He did not indicate one way or the other whether he thought it was the real deal. Which Iâm sure it works that way for anyone bringing things in. He asked to keep it so he could look at it better and make some phone calls. He said that he had never seen this kind of bottle used. Itâs very Victornia looking. This comment did not bother me. Iâm telling you there is no way anyone else could have done it. Didnât say how long it would be before he called me back. Which I understand. I took some pictures last night. Not a computer nerd but if you are comfortable giving me your email I will attempt to send those to you. Anxious to hear from you.
PS Made the decision last night, since I couldnât sleep, that if this is real I will donate it to the museum if they want it. Donât want the responsibility of this sitting on a shelf in my home. Just plan wrong on many levels to profit from this adventure. How cool is it to have something you found in a museum?
Sandglass (2011-02-23):
Kathy - this continuing story is fascinating and I look forward to further episodes. And yes, Iâd be very interested to see the photos - my e-mail address is on the blog, but here it is directly:
mw@throughthesandglass.com.
As things progress, would you like to write a guest post for my blog? I would really appreciate it.
Best
Michael
neil custard (2011-03-09):
i have a sand bottle i would like to know if it is an andrew clemons how can i find out
Sandglass (2011-03-10):
Hi Neil - your best bet would be to contact the Iowa Historical Society: http://www.iowahistory.org/. Perhaps send them a photograph?
Good luck!
Michael
Roy Sucholeiki (2011-04-03):
Hi folks,
I am a big fan of Andrew Clemens and have been researching him for quite some time. I also very familiar with many of his bottles. I am also familiar with a number of other sand artists that have attempted similar work. If you could provide pictures, I am sure I could identify who might have done them if not him.
Roy
sand art (2011-10-28):
Hye every one âŚI saw the pictures and I like themâŚIâm interested in this art and I have a 12 years experience in this art âŚso I can do a lot of sand bottlesâŚ
so if any one need to learn this art Iâm ready and any one who interested in this art please visit our website https://sites.google.com/site/sandsbottle/
& also on facebook http://www.facebook.com/pages/Desert-Magic/225038457509211
come&visit us and sure you will like what you will see!!!
Maggie Clark (2012-08-02):
To Kathy, If youâre still tracking comments on the sand bottle you found, Iâd love to see a picture of the bottle you found. Wish I could find something that remarkable at one of the thrift stores. If youâre okay with e-mailing me the pictures, my e-mail is wyotumblebeaders@yahoo.com. I have several pictures of his work, and just tracked down a copy of Spinning Wheel Antiques magazine from 1965 which has one of his bottles on the cover. Let me know what you think.
Maggie
don pettit (2013-12-03):
I lived in Mcgregor 1948-1955. There was a shop that sold sand bottle pictures about a block from my house. I used to go in look at them but I donât know who made them I know the sand came from pike;s pike park. I guess I should have bought some
as I knew the lady that ran the store!! but I was only 14 years and didnât have
much money
Don Pettit
gonia (2014-01-05):
WowâŚis it possible to still find his bottles?
gonia (2014-01-05):
Kathy Hoover, to which Good Will store did you go? In what stateâŚwondering.
gonia (2014-01-05):
Kathy Hoover , tell us the end story on the bottle you found. Have you really given it to the museum?
John E. & Emily W. Olive (2016-12-15):
This is amazing - I had an office in Jackson.Ms for 7 yrs. and found a sale held in a outdoor theater on the weekend - owner of my bottle offered to me as a"lamp"-had put a shad on it, so from there Iâm now 84 retired,and have had this bottle stored till recently. Took it to a lamp store toPurchase a new shad!! Owner advised me it was not a Lamp and may be quite valuable. Since I now have it on a table, no shade. Itâs an amazing work as pictures will show. It had to be done by a professional for sure.The cap was lost at some point -but the origional wax seal remains in tact. I had added an additional cork for added security. It also seems to have a layer of plastic covering over the entire bottle - unusual for something this old. My email is Johnemily@bellsouth.com. Be happy to hear - Pictures available. I am referring to Christies in New york for an appraisel. Forty yrs ago, I paid about $20.00!
Robert Brooks (2017-10-29):
I have a believed to be the only sand picture of its kind it is made of the Sands from pikes peak state park in McGregor Iowa and it is of the scenic view from pikes Peak looking down on the Mississippi I inherited it from my father who had it hanging his business for years I believe you got it from his great grandfather dates back to sometime in the late 1800s it is absolutely beautiful. If anyone would like a picture of it I would be more than happy to email you wan I have no idea what something like this is worth I would love to get it on the roadshow. Iâm not planning on selling it want to keep it in the family.
Originally published at: https://throughthesandglass.typepad.com/through_the_sandglass/2009/01/grainbygrain-2-the-amazing-sand-bottles-of-andrew-clemens.html
Discussion (21)
$3,000.-$5,000.
Michael
PS Made the decision last night, since I couldn't sleep, that if this is real I will donate it to the museum if they want it. Don't want the responsibility of this sitting on a shelf in my home. Just plan wrong on many levels to profit from this adventure. How cool is it to have something you found in a museum?
mw@throughthesandglass.com.
As things progress, would you like to write a guest post for my blog? I would really appreciate it.
Best
Michael
Good luck!
Michael
I am a big fan of Andrew Clemens and have been researching him for quite some time. I also very familiar with many of his bottles. I am also familiar with a number of other sand artists that have attempted similar work. If you could provide pictures, I am sure I could identify who might have done them if not him.
Roy
so if any one need to learn this art I'm ready and any one who interested in this art please visit our website https://sites.google.com/site/sandsbottle/
& also on facebook http://www.facebook.com/pages/Desert-Magic/225038457509211
come&visit us and sure you will like what you will see!!!!
Maggie
as I knew the lady that ran the store!! but I was only 14 years and didn't have
much money
Don Pettit
Share your thoughts