Portrait of an ice artist: 'It's so chill!'

Jeremiah Bickford of Sheffield, who has participated in the ice-carving competition four years and won first place in the amateur division three times, said he took up ice carving on a whim.

“Five years ago, SWSA member Willie Hallihan said to me, ‘You’ve got an art background. Why don’t you give it a try?’� Bickford said.

Bickford earned an associate’s degree in graphic design from Northwestern Connecticut Community College in Winsted and a bachelor’s degree in fine arts from the University of Wyoming. He said his favorite medium is printmaking, but his second-favorite is bronze casting.

“If I ever come into a small fortune, the first thing I’d do is build a bronze foundry,� he said.

But ice presents very different challenges than bronze.

“It has the difficulty of being heavy but fragile. It’s super temperature-sensitive, and light damages it. The UV light gets inside it and bounces around and weakens it. I learned that my third year.�

Planning a design in ice is difficult, too. Bickford said any guidelines made in the ice are very temporary and it’s easy to lose your spot in the piece. Adjustments need to be made for the weather conditions.

“At about 2:30, the sun came through the clouds and temperature went up,� he said. Some of the letters he had already carved broke and he had to adjust the design on the fly.

Bickford said he only sculpts ice for the Salisbury competition.

“One of the pros had some tools and fixed my chainsaw,� he said. “That’s why I keep doing this. There’s tool swapping, idea swapping, no one keeps a secret.This is a kind of rarity, the comaraderie. It’s so chill. Everyone is in it for a good time.�

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