During his 27 years building Broadway and movie sets, Ron Daisomont
learned how to work with wood, metal and a variety of other materials.
But with tight deadlines, patience was not his strong suit.
“I’d be the
guy you’d hear swearing,” he said.
Now, he is working with a new material, and he is learning patience.
His art is biblical sculpture.
His medium: bars of Dial soap.
You might say he has cleaned up his act.
“I used to work for Scenic Technologies, out of New Windsor, N.Y.,”
he said. “I worked on all the major Broadway shows, including Cats, the
original Les Miserables, the original Phantom (of the Opera), and a lot
of road shows.”
Four years ago, he fell at a train station and fractured several
bones. It put him out of commission, and he has had to look for other
ways to use his talents. About a year ago, he found a way.
“A friend of mine took a bar of soap and carved a hand. He took
another and carved another hand, so he had praying hands,” Daisomont
said. “He put them on a base. I said, ‘Gee, I could probably do that.’
So, the next day I actually started carving crosses, and God gave me the
name of it: Crosswerks Ministries.”
Presumably, God spelled it correctly, but a computer search told
Daisomont that there were some 1,900 companies with “Crossworks” in
their names.
So he settled on “Crosswerks.”
Daisomont’s soap sculptures range in size from about four inches high
and a few ounces in weight to nearly a foot high and weighing about
three pounds.
Some large pieces give a new meaning to “eight to the
bar.”
Biblical scenes include King David’s golden harp, for which he uses
dental floss for the strings; Noah’s ark, both during the flood and
after landing on Mount Ararat; chariots with wheels that actually turn
on axles fashioned from pen cartridges; crosses and crucifixes;
chalices; gates of Samson; and more.
Does it matter which kind of soap he uses?
“Oh, absolutely, yes. Dial soap. Actually, I tried a few different
types. My buddy didn’t really know what kind of soap he used.”
Daisomont discovered that a 3.2-ounce bar of Dial is dryer than most
other brands and easier to work with. “I’ll go to a dollar store and buy
like 16 bars at a time, three bars for a dollar.
Ten days ago I bought
62 bars, and I think I have a dozen left,” he said.
He saves all his
shavings and molds them into tiny swords, helmets, shields and bases for
his sculptures.
To join several bars, he will use a carpenter’s lap joint, fit them
together, pour hot water over them, drain the water and press the bars
together until they are fused.
Among the more than 100 sculptures he has made are about 30 armors of
God.
“If you look up Ephesians, chapter 6: 10-20, it will tell you all
about putting on the armor of God,” he said. “I use the breastplate, the
shield, the helmet; and then the sword, naturally, is the word of God.”
The only paint that he uses is gold paint for the chalices and
David’s harp. “Anything that’s brown is instant coffee,” he said.
Other
colors are achieved by shaving colored pencil leads and mixing them with
a special floor wax, letting it set, and then applying the mixture with
a Q-tip.
Using a few simple tools like an X-ACTO knife, a razor blade, a
hacksaw blade and sandpaper, he is able to achieve the look and texture
of wood, marble, granite and other materials. But, he doesn’t take
credit for it.
“It’s all the work of the Holy Spirit,” he said.
“I was a carpenter for many years and a certified welder, but I have
absolutely zero training in art,” he said. “Doing these sculptures is
like putting plastic models of cars together, except there are no
directions. The Holy Spirit is my directions.”
Daisomont, who attends St. Michael Church in Waterbury, hopes to form
a nonprofit organization, build a Web site and sell his sculptures at
church bazaars to raise money for Catholic causes.
Until then, he is
stockpiling his art and selling it piece by piece, starting at $29.95.
When a repairman showed up at his home to work on the television,
Daisomont showed him the sculptures in his studio.
“He was here for over an hour,” Daisomont said. “My TV’s still the same.”
For more information on Crosswerks Ministries, contact: info@catholictranscript.org