Farmers and artists? Many think that these two are strange bedfellows. But Midwestern winters are long and farmers are creative. And handy. They often find themselves in the barn or garage after chores are done, tinkering with the objects that surround them. The farmer may be the man (or woman) who feeds our bodies with meat, grain, and vegetables, but the farmer may also be the person who feeds our imaginations with artwork––creations that allow us to take a metaphorical leap into heart-felt emotion.
My crew and I found such a farmer-artist in the most recent episode (#35) of the AgArts from Horse & Buggy Land podcast. We were on the road in Manning, Iowa, in Carroll County, interviewing Scott Eickman.
Eickman makes junk sculpture. He works at his family farm operation during the day. He gives therapeutic massages in a clinic in town, then retires to his garage studio at night, welding together nuts, bolts, combine chains and other implement parts into sculptures that have drawn 40,000 admirers on Tick Tok. A veteran, Eickman travelled the world in the Marine Corps, deploying to both Iraq and Afghanistan where he became interested in healing modalities—both body work and the work of healing the soul through art.
We visited Eickman’s home just off Highway 141, winding down through his backyard to his garage. There, we saw his sculpture of a Marine carrying his buddy out of combat, made with thousands of old military dog tags. The massive piece is taller than Eickman himself, nearly brushing the garage ceiling. Eickman dedicated his Covid-19 lockdown time to working on the sculpture. But it isn’t the size of the piece that creates its power. It’s the emotion that comes through its welded parts. It’s the compassion that shines through the patriotism—one man carrying the wounded body of a friend through enemy fire.
Scott Eickman:
My sculpture shows a soldier carrying his buddy who has lost a leg in combat. The guy on top is completely covered in dog tags. The dog tags have the names of all of the fallen from Iraq and Afghanistan Wars. It’s to give the effect of carrying the weight of the fallen with you throughout your entire life, whether it be from combat, or after combat like the guys dealing with PTSD right now. Some of them aren’t able to handle the loss of their brothers and sisters, and they’re trying to get through that. Some soldiers are constantly carrying—I don’t want to say the weight of the world—because it’s a common phrase, but it pretty much is, the weight of the world on them. So that’s the main effect of the sculpture. The reason I have them in motion: No matter what, you have to keep pushing forward. No matter what, when you’re in a mission or anything like that, if your guy goes down, you just keep going.
To keep going and hear the whole interview with Scott Eickman, tune into the AgArts from Horse & Buggy Land podcast wherever you get your podcasts or on our website: www.agarts.org/podcast/.
On the home page of our website www.agarts.org, you’ll also find the above slide show of beautiful photos by Annie Chapman Brewer of Eickman and his amazing sculpture. Music by Robert Stone of Omaha, NE., originally from Carroll.
I’m thankful to the Iowa Writers Collaborative for inviting me to join their Substack group. Please support the other talented writers in this bunch. Click, read and subscribe. You can subscribe for free, or if you can, please support us with cash. Contributions to my page go to AgArts and its work creating artist residencies on farms. Many thanks to Julie Gammack for pulling this group together, and to Kathie Obradovich for featuring many of these Substack posts in The Iowa Capital Dispatch.
Here we are, in alphabetical order.
Laura Belin: Iowa Politics with Laura Belin
Doug Burns: The Iowa Mercury
Art Cullen: Art Cullen’s Notebook
Julie Gammack: Julie Gammack’s Iowa Potluck
Beth Hoffman: In the Dirt
Dana James: New Black Iowa
Bob Leonard: Deep Midwest: Politics and Culture
Chuck Offenburger: Iowa Boy Chuck Offenburger
Mary Swander: Mary Swander’s Buggy Land
Iowa Writers Collaborative: Iowa Writers Collaborative
Oooo video pics and music is wonderful! Does Scott have a website? Love this perfect example of the power in this kind of storytelling!