“She was my champion.”

This week in Studio 360, I talk with Kurt Andersen about the lingering resonance of childhood in many artists’ work.  Over the next few days I’ll post stories that connect with this idea, and I wanted to start with a photographer whose work I fell in love with when we had him on the show: David Plowden.  He’s taken moving and resonant photographs of our American way of life as it disappears, focusing on steam trains, small towns, harbors and steel mills and the people who work there. 

David’s passion for trains began early – in fact the first picture he ever took was of a train pulling into the station in Putney, Vermont.  He was 11 years old, and had just been given a camera as a present.

 “Well the first time I went to photograph it, I got buck fever, and I handed the camera to my mother. I said, here you take it. I started to shake. The next time I went down I was steadier, and I managed to take a picture. I still have it.”

David grew up in New York City, staring out his apartment window at the boats that traveled up and down the East River.  He went to boarding school, and then to Yale – but after graduation, instead of working in an office, he went to work for the railroad.

“I rode all over the place, to the despair of my uncles and aunts and my mother’s friends, who said, ‘What’s he going to amount to? He just rides trains.’ And she said, ‘I don’t know what he’s doing, but he does. Leave him alone; he’s gathering grist for the mill.’ She was my champion.”

I think of David Plowden’s mother often as I imagine my own sons’ futures.  I hope I can be as determined as she was to grant them the time to figure out who they are.

Where do you go to gather grist for your mill?

 

 

"My son the artist"

As I was writing Spark and looking through the Studio 360 archive for stories about childhood, I found that some people knew from an incredibly early age that they would become artists.  The sculptor Richard Serra is one of those – although it was actually his mother who decided that he was destined to be an artist.  Here’s what he had to say about it: “I don’t know if you know anything about Jewish mothers, but they’re very important. And she was very insistent right away – in the third grade a teacher pulled her into class and they had all of my drawings up around the room. She called my mother in and pointed it out and said you should take this child to museums to encourage what he’s already doing. So my mother totally got onto the program and started taking me to museums very early and started introducing me as “Richard the Artist.”

Serra’s mom called Serra's brother “the lawyer” when he was growing up and he became a quite famous lawyer.  It is interesting to hear how one artist’s mother knew before anyone else that her child would become someone who could shape the way we see the world.  Now, as a mom myself I know that I can’t shape my sons’ entire future – nor would I want to -- but I do catch myself saying one is “my science kid” and the other is “my writer.”  Will that have an impact on their future?

You can hear Richard Serra, Chuck Close, Richard Ford and Mira Nair talk about childhood this weekend on Studio 360 when I speak with host Kurt Andersen about Spark

Did you know who you would become when you were small?  Did your parents?  I'd love to hear your story about the moment you knew what you wanted to do.

Photo by GlennFleishman

Spark: How Creativity Works to be published by Harper

I'm thrilled that my first book, and the first Studio 360 book, will be published in February.  It's called Spark: How Creativity Works, and in it I continue the Studio 360 exploration of where art and real life collide through observations and conversations with artists, filmmakers, writers, musicians, and dancers about where they find their inspiration, how they overcome challenges, and the importance of just getting to work. 

These extrarodinary creators, who have all appeared on Studio 360, include Chuck Close, Mira Nair, Ang Lee, Richard Ford, Tony Kushner, Rosanne Cash, Alison Krauss, Robert Plant, and Richard Serra.