Thursday, February 12, 2009

Sharem and Dan, Horse and Trainer


Joyce Wassick, of Bruceton Mills, West Virginia, commissioned the sculpture of her husband with his favorite Arabian Stallion, Sharem, in 2008.  Sculptor Jamie Lester put the finishing touches on the bronze sculpture of horse and trainer in February of 2009.  These images show the work from the early stages of planning to the completed piece.
  • First, a drawing was created by Jamie in order to come to a better visual understanding of the subject matter.  It is important for the artist and client to think about the meaning created by relationships between multiple subjects.  In the initial stages, we settled on a running training exercise that placed Dan alongside Sharem.
  • The armature is created with iron pipe and aluminum wire, to create a foundation for the clay sculpture.



  • Plastelina clay is modelled onto the armature, creating musculature and approximating the form, using multiple photo sources as a guide.
The clay form is refined, using brushes and cloths, wooden tools, and fingers.
  • After much revision the clay modelling is brought to a level of detail that both artist and client feel represents the subjects to the highest possible degree.  Molds are then made of the finished clay, and taken to the foundry.  
  • The foundry uses the "lost wax" process to cast the molten bronze in the form of the artist's molds.  The bronze is welded, chased, and patinaed to the artist's specs.  Elements too small to be cast, such as the training crop, and the lead, are brazed on.

  • Detail of the finished bronze, Dan with the training crop, which was added after casting.
  • The patina was varied to emulate the natural color of Sharem.

World Golf Hall of Fame


The World Golf Hall of Fame is the ultimate destination for the celebration and recognition of golf's greatest players and contributors and serves as an inspiration to golfers and golf fans throughout the world.  The Hall of Fame opened its doors at World Golf Village in St. Augustine, Florida in 1998.  

Lester has completed more than 120 of the life size bronze relief busts that honor the inductees to the World Golf Hall of Fame.


John Nash Plaque for Bluefield Historical Society




John Nash is an American mathemetician whose works in game theory, differential geometry, and partial differential equations provided insight to the forces that govern chance and events inside complex systems in daily life.  His theories are still used today in market economics, computing, accounting, and military theory.  Nash served as Senior Research Mathemetician at Princeton University during the latter part of his career, and shared the 1994 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences with game theorists Reinhard Selten and John Harsanyi.

This sculpture was completed as part of a monument to John Nash in his birthplace of Bluefield, West Virginia, and will be erected and dedicated in 2009.  These 
pictures depict the progression from concept, design, clay sculpture, and finished bronze.