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    <front>
        <journal-meta>
            <journal-id>JFRR</journal-id>
            <journal-title-group>
                <journal-title>Journal of Folklore Research Reviews</journal-title>
            </journal-title-group>
            <issn pub-type="epub">2832-8132</issn>
            <publisher>
                <publisher-name>IU ScholarWorks</publisher-name>
            </publisher>
        </journal-meta>
        <article-meta>
            <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">39936</article-id>
            <title-group>
                <article-title>Marjorie Hunt - Review of Henry Glassie: Fieldwork - (DVD)</article-title>
            </title-group>
            <contrib-group>
                <contrib contrib-type="author">
                    <name>
                        <surname>Marjorie Hunt</surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                    <aff>Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage</aff>
                    <address>
                        <email></email>
                    </address>
                </contrib>
            </contrib-group>
            <pub-date publication-format="epub" date-type="pub" iso-8601-date="2021">
                <year>2022</year>
            </pub-date>
            <product product-type="book">
                <person-group>
                    <name>
                        <surname></surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                </person-group>
                <source>Henry Glassie: Fieldwork - (DVD)
                </source>
                <series></series>
                <year iso-8601-date="2021">2019</year>
                <publisher-loc></publisher-loc>
                <publisher-name>A South Wind Blows ltd</publisher-name>
                <page-range>Length: 1:45:00</page-range>
                <price></price>
                <isbn></isbn>
            </product>
            <permissions>
                <copyright-statement>Reviewers retain copyright and grant JFRR the right of first publication with the review simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License that allows others to share or redistribute reviews with an acknowledgment of the review's original authorship and initial publication JFRR.</copyright-statement>
            </permissions>
        </article-meta>
    </front>
    <body>
        <fig id="f0" orientation="portrait" position="anchor">
            <alt-text>A person making pot.</alt-text>
            <graphic xlink:href="Henry Glassie.jfif"/>
        </fig>
        <p><italic>Henry Glassie: Field Work</italic>, a feature-length documentary by Irish
            filmmaker Pat Collins, is an inspiring, beautifully crafted, and deeply meaningful
            portrait of renowned folklorist Henry Glassie. Meditative and evocative, it powerfully
            captures Glassie’s philosophy and approach to his life’s work and shines a spotlight on
            the creativity and excellence of extraordinary artists across the globe.</p>
        <p>The film opens with an intimate close-up of Glassie’s face in profile. As the music draws
            the viewer in, we hear him speak eloquently of art as “the unity in being of the
            personal and social,” as creative acts that bring “a momentary fulfillment of what it is
            to be human.” This brief introduction sets the stage for what follows—an immersive
            journey to the places where Glassie has conducted fieldwork over the course of half a
            century—Brazil, Turkey, North Carolina, and Ireland—to meet the people who have been his
            great teachers, artists who have generously shared their knowledge, skills, values, and
            aspirations; individuals whom he deeply reveres and respects. “What I do is I don’t
            study people at all, I stand with people and study the things they create. That’s what
            interests me. What do <italic>they</italic> choose to present as emblems of their
            being.”</p>
        <p>Taking his cue from Glassie, Pat Collins puts the artists and their creative process
            front and center. Through long, sustained shots of artists at work, the viewer is
            invited to experience Glassie’s ethnographic methods for ourselves, to watch attentively
            as potters, clay sculptors, woodcarvers, and metalsmiths lovingly create objects of
            beauty by hand.</p>
        <p>Early in the film, we are transported to the workshop of clay sculptor Rosalvo Santanna
            in the village of Maragojipinho in Bahia, Brazil, to witness him craft a statue of the
            Virgin Mary. Slowly, patiently, the camera documents the process of creation as
            Santanna’s deft hands roll, pound, and shape the clay to make the statue’s long, flowing
            hair, undulating robe, and delicate hands and fingers. We see the artist’s face in calm
            concentration as he painstakingly works with different tools, taking care to get every
            detail exactly right. Perfectly lit and beautifully shot, there is an immediacy and
            intimacy that connects us with the maker and his artistry as the sculpture takes shape
            and moves to completion.</p>
        <p>Throughout the entire scene the only sounds the viewer hears are the ambient sounds of
            place—the slapping and pounding of clay, children playing, a baby crying, people
            talking, roosters crowing—the sounds of the street, workshop, and home. It’s as if we
            are actually in the studio with Santanna in real time, silent observers, like Glassie,
            quietly, respectfully watching the artist at work, carefully absorbing key visual
            information as the artistic process slowly unfolds. It is a brilliant creative decision
            on the part of director Pat Collins. Indeed, throughout the film whenever artists are
            creating works of art there are no explanatory subtitles, except for the names of people
            and places, and no voiceover or on-camera commentary to interrupt the contemplative and
            absorbing flow of the work. What comes across is the immense skill and knowledge, the
            care, patience, and commitment that it takes to make beautiful things.</p>
        <p>From the rural town of Maragojipinho we go to the coastal city of Salvador in Bahia. In
            one of the great sequences in the film, and there are many, we meet Edival and Izaura
            Rosas, masters of intricately carved and exquisitely painted wooden sculptures of
            religious figures. As Edival gazes reverently at the stunning statues that adorn the
            altar of a church, he shares what he considers to be his proudest artistic
            achievement—his efforts to faithfully recreate in spirit and skill two statues that were
            missing from a tableau on the altar of the four Evangelists, “following the marks” of
            the two remaining sculptures “so that the greatness of this early artist would flow
            through me.” Edival’s desire to honor and respect the hand of the original artist comes
            shining through. Later, as Izaura Rosas delicately applies gold leaf to a carved wooden
            sculpture in their atelier, she speaks of her deep love for her art, how each piece is
            an integral part of her life “like a child or a grandchild.” It is mesmerizing to hear
            these remarkable artists talk about what their work means to them, to discover, as
            Glassie underscores later in the film, what it is that <italic>they</italic> think is
            beautiful and good.</p>
        <p>For the first part of the documentary, we glimpse only brief shots here and there of
            Henry Glassie and his wife, folklorist Pravina Shukla, speaking with artists, watching
            intently as they work, receiving hugs of warm greeting. Glassie takes a few photographs,
            he writes in his field notebook, but the focus remains firmly on the artists. It is not
            until forty-five minutes into the film, while still in Bahia, that we hear Glassie’s
            wise words, both on camera and as voiceover, as he shares his insights into what
            inspires individuals like Rosalvo Santanna and Edival Rosas to create excellent works of
            art and the influences that inform how they practice their craft. “Every community in
            the world has as a result of its social interactions a kind of agreement on what is
            beautiful,” he says. “I don’t think that the inner drive of the artist is different,
            it’s the circumstantial set that’s different.”</p>
        <p>From these key thoughts on the centrality of circumstance and community context, Collins
            brings us from Brazil to Bloomington, Indiana, to learn about Glassie’s own personal
            journey and the early influences that shaped him and the work he does. As he writes at
            his desk in his study surrounded by pots, banjos, ceramic plates, and carpets—handmade
            objects redolent with memory and meaning—Glassie tells of his formative years listening
            to his grandmother’s stories of local history and watching his grandfather craft
            beautiful pieces of furniture out of wood, experiences that instilled in him an abiding
            interest in the history of place and a passion for artistic process. We hear how he was
            first drawn to folklore as a young man by his love of the traditional music of the Blue
            Ridge Mountains of North Carolina, a love that quickly blossomed into a wider interest
            in people and their cultural expressions, whether manifested in farming practices, old
            architecture, or crafts.</p>
        <p>During this engaging scene, Glassie unpacks the underlying principles and ideas, the
            protocols and practices, that motivate and guide his research. “The kind of ethnographic
            work I do requires a long time in place,” he says. His goal is to get to know a
            community and its people well, to gain “an understanding of their excellence.” As he
            speaks, Collins skillfully weaves together images of Glassie’s extensive fieldwork
            documentation—hand drawn maps, field notes, drawings, photographs of people and their
            art—interspersed with interview footage of Glassie on camera. These well-chosen visuals,
            paired with revelatory words, powerfully enhance the viewer’s understanding of Glassie’s
            fieldwork methods and goals—his “ethnographic quest.” We marvel at the remarkable
            breadth and depth of his endeavors, his careful documentation, the rigor of his
            research. “What I want to know about any community is what they think is good,” he says.
            “The entirety of my art, my science, is to learn how to adjust to their view.”</p>
        <p>The film continues on its journey to document inspiring individuals creating art, taking
            us to Turkey, North Carolina, and Ireland. Along the way, Collins follows Glassie’s
            protocol of beginning with a sense of place, starting each scene with beautiful
            establishing shots of the local environment—the rolling hills and mountains of
            Appalachia; the fields, streams, and country lanes of Ballymenone, Ireland; the
            workshops and wood-fired kilns of master potters in the Piedmont region of North
            Carolina; the mountain villages of skilled weavers in Turkey. In places like Ireland and
            Turkey, where Glassie conducted decades of fieldwork years ago, Collins expertly edits
            together maps, photographs, archival footage, and audio recordings into evocative scenes
            that vividly capture community life and art. In Ballymenone, field recordings of
            stories, songs, and music, coupled with photographic portraits, bring Glassie’s
            cherished mentors Hugh Nolan and Peter Flanagan to life as they share their knowledge
            and wisdom. In Kütahya, Turkey, archival film footage of Glassie interacting in the
            Turkish language with ceramic masters Ahmet Sahin and Mehmet Gürsoy conveys the mutual
            respect and close bonds of friendship they share with each other.</p>
        <p>An absorbing concluding montage of artists in the process of making reunites viewers with
            the talented individuals we have met over the course of the documentary: superb potters
            Daniel Johnston, Kate Johnston, and Mark Hewitt shape clay into awe-inspiring pots in
            North Carolina; Turkish weavers at their looms weave strikingly designed carpets; clay
            sculptor Rosalvo Santanna, woodcarver Edival Rosas, painter Izaura Rosas, and metal
            sculptor Samuel Rodrigues create sacred art in Brazil—all of them working with passion
            and devotion towards excellence.</p>
        <p>Masterfully directed by Pat Collins and exquisitely filmed by Colm Hogan, <italic>Henry
                Glassie: Field Work</italic> is a triumph—a tangible and lasting work of beauty that
            honors, through its own fine craftsmanship, the tremendous artistry of the individuals
            it features, and brings to a wide audience the critically important work and art of
            folklorist Henry Glassie.</p>
        
        <p>--------</p>
        <p>[Review length: 1516 words • Review posted on February 11, 2022]</p>
        
        
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