Honoring Prentice, provider of hope

CORNWALL — When Tim Prentice received a phone call from the Northwest Connecticut Arts Council last month, he was surprised to learn that he was one of the organization’s 2017 CultureMAX honorees and would be receiving their Lifetime Achievement award.

During a recent interview about the honor, the Cornwall sculptor avoided any talk of gratitude or pride, choosing instead to deflect emotions with humor.

“When the phone rang — well, it was the same day they announced the MacArthur ‘genius grant’ awards. So I guess I still have to wait for one of them.”

When Prentice laughs, which he does often — at his own jokes or someone else’s or simply at life in general — it is generally a single, sharp chuckle.

“The ceremony is on Nov. 14,” he continued, “so I guess I’m going to retire on the 15th.” There’s that chuckle again. “I mean, it’s a lifetime achievement award. After that, I have nothing left to achieve.”

Jokes notwithstanding, the 87-year-old is actually far from retirement. He and his staff of three assistants are currently constructing two sculptures, one commissioned by Capital One and the other by the Knight Cancer Research Center in Portland, Ore., while drawing up plans for a third piece still in the design stage.

Like just about all of Prentice’s works, the new sculptures are made from extremely light pieces of plastic or metal and are moved by the wind.

“The wind gives me all sorts of ideas,” he said. “I just let the air be the designer.”

Even the indoor installations are kinetic, because, “air is always moving, whether it’s caused by the rush from an air conditioning vent, the movement of people or simply the increase in body heat as a room fills up.”

A lifetime in Cornwall

Prentice lives in an antique farmhouse and has his studio/workshop in the farm’s former ice house. The barn across the street, as well as the grounds themselves, serve as a display area for a surprising number of his works.

While Prentice has been creating sculptures since his teen years, it’s actually a second career for him. He originally followed in his father’s footsteps and became an architect. And before that, he grew up in Cornwall.

“My parents moved here in 1930. That was the year I was born, so I had no say in the decision. But I approved of it.”

After college, graduate school and a stint in the Navy, he lived and practiced architecture in New York City for about a decade. In the 1960s, “a few friends wanted a home somewhere in this part of the world — of course, I suggested Cornwall — and the four of us bought the whole farm.” After splitting up the property, “two of them turned around and asked me to design their house — and we’re still on speaking terms!”

Of the move back to Cornwall, he mused, “That’s the smartest thing I ever did, I suppose.”

It was several years later, at the age of 43, that Prentice “changed majors” as he calls it and became a professional sculptor. But it wasn’t an abrupt transition. “One year the architecture would support the sculpture, and the next year the sculpture would support the architecture.”

The sculptures are everywhere

Hanging inconspicuously on the wall of the ice house is a small map of Cornwall marked with scores of circular stickers in two colors, one representing houses Prentice has remodeled, the other those he designed from scratch. 

Sculptures, or perhaps pieces of them, hang from the ceiling of every room in the building. 

But it’s the barn that houses the most treasures, many of which Prentice constructed simply for his own amusement. There are several musical instruments, strings and percussion, including the “two-by-phone,” a xylophone made from construction-grade 2-by-4s, and a stretch of PVC pipes that are played from the hayloft. 

“You whack the tops of the pipes with shower shoes and get great bass tones.”

The downstairs is a bona fide gallery, its white walls covered with smaller pieces, all kinetic, and a good number more hanging from the ceiling. Some are moved by hand; others have small fans mounted to provide energy when the wind can’t.

Hanging tight up against the ceiling of the upper floor is a large circle composed entirely of brightly colored feathers. A number of hospitals have commissioned works with feathers. Prentice recalled one in particular.

“We received a letter from a woman who’d just finished treatments at the cancer wing of Hartford Hospital. She said parking her car under the sign that said ‘Cancer Patients’ was so daunting, but she was thrilled to sit down under that piece while waiting for her treatment and be reminded of the beauty in the world. 

“She quoted the Emily Dickinson poem, ‘“Hope” Is the Thing with Feathers.’ Well, I was undone. That was when I felt I’d done the right thing.”

The Northwest Connecticut Arts Council’s 2017 CultureMAX awards will be presented on Tuesday, Nov. 14, at 5:30 p.m. at the Warner Theatre in Torrington. Tickets to the ceremony and reception cost $30, $25 for Arts Council members. For information or to buy tickets, go to www. artsnwct.org/about/culturemax-awards.

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