Local Sculptor's Talent Brings Unseen Sea Life To The Surface ? ?? ? ? ? HY LYNN CARLSON Duane Schilz is a different kind o'' sculptor. He brings to those who view his work a pail of the world most people are aware of. but almost none have seen. Growing up among seashells and shell enthusiasts, he taught himself to sculpt models of the thousands of species which inhabit the sea ? not the shells, but th^ animals which inhabit them. Painstakingly interpreted from drawings in textbooks and other published sources, Schilz's sculp tures range from the tiny nudi branks and sea slugs to large octopi and squid. They are colorful and precise, reflecting the luminescence which the sea creatures exhibit in the deep, but which they lose out of their natural habitat. It all comes pretty naturally for the Shallotte resident. His grand mother. Zyda Kibler, is a longtime collector, dealer and true expert in shells, from the exotic to the rare to the simply beautiful. Schilz grew up "hanging around" the shell mu seum his grandmother operated in Virginia Beach. "1 was there several hours a day. 1 had clay, and I was always mak ing dinosaurs and other animals. It was a way to kill time. My interests changed, but 1 kept up w ith it over the years." It's a unique talent ? an art. a craft, and a science which few have pursued, especially at his young age. His work has been bought for museums in Australia, Japan, Germany and Belgium as well as right here at home, in the Museum of Coastal Carolina at Ocean Isle Beach. } " There 's a lot to be learned from small things about the way all nature works. " ? Duane Schilz His sculptures also appear in Atlanta's exciting new Fembank Museum of Natural History, with its "Walk Through Time in Geor gia" exhibit and 14 galleries inter preting the state's landscape and animal life, including its coastal shoreline. Schilz's sculpture of a scotch bonnet ? the state shell of North Carolina ? was purchased as a spe cial gift to Emperor Hirohito of Japan shortly before the ruler's death. "As far as 1 know, it got to him," Schilz says. "Marine life just can't be pre served," he explains, so exacting reproductions like his are the only means of bringing the shapes and brilliant colors of the species to life for humans. "Most shells are nocturnal," he adds. "They're not real active un less they're feeding. ! try to illus trate what the animal looks like at its best." To do this, he has used all types of media, including "every type of clay known," to plastic, to paper maiche to the epoxy-filled mold he used for a squid he sculpted for the Your ALLERGIC or SINUS Condition . . . Is Not Child's Play It you sufferlrom a serious sinus or allergic condition that reacts whenever the weather changes, you hardly need to be told ...it's not child's play! At the of lice of Mark A. Lizak, MD,a staff of experienced professionals will take your call very seriously. We have blended modern medical know how with year.; of training and experience. This allows us ? real opportunity to provide you with our unique kind of quality care Could you accept less ... for your family? Mark A. Lizak, MD Board Certified Specialist: FAR, NOSE & THROAT Conveniently located in the Doctor's Office Complex at the Brunswick Hospital, Supply, North Carolina. For Appointments Call: 754-2920 T L>- ' 1 HIIAXir C S-liii-r STAFF PHOTO BY IYNN CARLSON St HI LZ poses over a case of shells, including some of his sculptures, in his grandmother's Shallotte home. Fembank Museum. The modest Schilz has a one woman cheering section in his grandmother. Despite major sur gery and a long recuperative peri od, Kihler has endless font of en thusiasm for her grandson's talent. Case upon case, box upon box and drawer upon drawer in Kibler's sprawling Shallotte home hold not only hundreds of thousands of shells, but her grandson's work from his youth to the present. She'd like to see him promote his talent a little more vigorously. Schilz, who is unfailingly polite and unassuming, says he "doesn't have the ego it takes" to thrive commercially in some art circles. It is only in recent years that he has begun to talk to other artists outside his field about painting techniques and how different ef fects can be achieved. 1 le has no formal art training and says he can't paint or draw, though he does do sketches he "wouldn't show anybody." But he knows more about the creatures he sculpts than many biol ogists would, thanks to his lifelong exposure to people who love and deeply respect all nature, but espe cially the undersea world. "I'm thankful 1 grew up with this," he says, adding that he hasn't consistently pursued his craft in the past, but plans to as he grows older. "When I was younger, (his was; keeping me inside, and I wanted to get out and see my friends and be part of the world again ? to take up a 9-to-5 job." With maturity, though, comes the new realization that a unique talent like his is too good an opportunity to waste. "My work has been all over the world, but 1 haven't," he says. Keeping the sculptures going is the most logical way to remedy that. "I'm thankful I grew up with this ? in the museum, being under foot there. 1 learned to appreciate nature. There's a lot to be learned from small things about the way all nature works." ^ 1 Sparklers and Fire Crackers L BOOKWORM has a book for each THE BRIDGES OF MADISON COUNTY-Sparklers HILL TOWNS by Anne Rivers Siddons-Crackers or have a bang-up time with long awaited paperbacks... GERALD S GAME SAHARA COLONY Stephen King Clive Cussler Anne Rivers Siddons and don't forget the boo/c signing by the Kellys on August 21 of THE CAROLINA WATERMEN published by John L. Blair Holden Beach Causeway (at the bridge* Open Mon-Sat 10-9, Sun. 1 6 ? FAX ? PHOTOCOPY 842-7380