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Alonzo Clemons

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American sculptor and savant

Alonzo Clemons
Born1958
OccupationArtist

Alonzo Clemons (born 1958) is an Americansavant andsculptor fromBoulder, Colorado. He sustained a severe brain injury as a child that left him with adevelopmental disability. He achieved fame for his ability to sculpt almost any animal in a realistic and anatomically accurate three-dimensional rendering even after glancing at a picture for only mere seconds.

Life

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Clemons was born inBoulder, Colorado, in 1958, where he has lived his entire life.[1] At the age of three or four, Clemons experienced a severebrain injury due to afalling accident.[1][2] This left him with adevelopmental disability, having anIQ of around 40[2] and themental development of a six-year-old.[1] According to his mother, molding clay was his only interest as a child ever since the accident.[3] The accident left him barely able to speak and without the ability to read, write, drive a car, or tie his shoes, meaning he would only be able to live with assistance for the rest of his life. Due to the time he grew up in, his condition was not significantly treated in his youth.[4] Nevertheless, he acquired a high level of self-sufficiency, living in his own apartment and studio next to his mother, while his improvingsocial skills allowed him to work part-time at the localYMCA and partake inSpecial Olympics events inpowerlifting.[2][3]

Clemons is considered anacquired savant, meaning a person that acquired a disability and in turn received a prodigious talent in a certain field, in his casesculpting.[5] Savant syndrome researcherDarold Treffert has referred to Clemons as aprodigy, stating that if he were not disabled, he would be considered agenius.[2]

Artistry

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Three Frolicking Foals (1987), his first life-sized sculpture, inItasca, Illinois

His talent for sculpting began to show shortly after his injury, when he started usingclay, or, when unavailable, materials likebutter,lard, or evenbitumen to sculpt various animals, in most cases using only his hands.[1][2][6] As with other savants, he received and required no formal training of any sort, but is immediately able to sculpt any animal he sees, be it in person, on TV or on a photo,[7] in an accurate three-dimensional rendering, creating extremely lifelike clay sculptures that may later be cast into other materials.[8] Researchers have speculated that he is able to"freeze the frame" of what he sees at any moment in time and reproduce the exact image.[1][2] By 1987, he had already produced 500 clay pieces that filled his entire apartment.[1] One of his gallerists asserted that his ability grew the more contact to animals he had, attributing regular visits to theDenver Zoo and localanimal farms to his increased skill and range.[1] While most of his works centers around animals, he has also produced sculptures of humans orreligious symbols. Most of his artworks are small in size and sculpted in less than an hour,[9] however; he has also produced life-sized sculptures. His first work of the sort,Three Frolicking Foals, which was sold for $45,000 in 1987, only took him 15 days to produce, even though it required him to learn new techniques.[1] Aside from sculpting, he has also picked uppastel drawing.[2]

In 1983, he appeared in public for the first time on60 Minutes onCBS[1] and in May of the same year had his first public exhibition at an art gallery inDenver, Colorado, where a sculpture of a bull was sold for $950.[6] For decades, he had practiced his art in obscurity, until the 1988 filmRain Man created an interest insavant syndrome.[2][4][10] Subsequently, he was shown in multiple international documentaries and TV shows, such as the German documentaryExpedition ins Gehirn, leading to an increased interest in his art, which was then picked up by galleries and shown in art museums and at exhibitions around the world.

Clemons cannot describe how he sculpts and why his ability mostly relates to animals, but considers his ability to be a "gift fromGod" and not something he can, but rather something he has to do, an inner urge that enables him to show how he sees the world.[1][2] When asked how he does it, Alonzo will simply smile and point to his head.[6][11] His assistant has referred to working with clay as an "integral part of his personhood",[2] while he himself stated that he would be miserable if he were unable to sculpt.[5]

References

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  1. ^abcdefghijGarcia, Joseph (January 12, 1987)."Retarded Sculptor Continues to Astound Public, Doctors".Associated Press. RetrievedMay 16, 2021.
  2. ^abcdefghijAllen, Jaclyn (September 25, 2017)."Boulder savant creates inspiring sculptures with national following".Denver7. RetrievedMay 16, 2021.
  3. ^abTreffert, Darold."Alonzo Clemons — Genius Among Us". Wisconsin Medical Society. Archived fromthe original on December 13, 2007. Retrieved2007-11-07.
  4. ^abThomas, Rylee (March 4, 2020)."Alonzo Clemons: The Genius Sculptor".Out Front Magazine. RetrievedMay 16, 2021.
  5. ^abWeisfogel, Amiel (March 19, 2018)."Meet an acquired savant".CBS. RetrievedMay 16, 2021.
  6. ^abcSchmidt, William E. (July 23, 1983)."Gifted Retardates: The Search for Clues to Mysterious Talent".The New York Times. RetrievedMay 16, 2021.
  7. ^Barry, Ann Marie Seward (1997).Visual Intelligence: Perception, Image, and Manipulation in Visual Communication.State University of New York Press. p. 85.ISBN 0-7914-3436-2.
  8. ^Olson, Steve (2004).Count Down: Six Kids Vie for Glory at the World's Toughest Math Competition. Back Bay:Houghton Mifflin. p. 111.ISBN 0-618-25141-3.
  9. ^McGaugh, James L. (2003).Memory and Emotion: The Making of Lasting Memories. New York City:Columbia University Press. p. 133.ISBN 0-231-12022-2.
  10. ^Vorwerk-Gundermann, Liane (September 9, 2015)."Genial und doch geistig behindert".Focus (in German). RetrievedMay 16, 2021.
  11. ^Wallechinsky, David; Wallace, Amy (2005).The New Book of Lists: The Original Compendium of Curious Information. Edinburgh:Canongate Books. p. 594.ISBN 1-84195-719-4.

External links

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Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Alonzo_Clemons&oldid=1168633391"
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