I met Eben Armer, stonemason and sculptor, one day after work. He told me, “Go down New Lane a bit and turn at the stone pillars; you can’t miss it.” I have some customers down
on Tisbury Great Pond, and over the last few years, driving to work for them, I’d noticed some activity off in the woods near where I figured he was directing me. I was curious to see what lurked back there.
It was a hot and muggy July scorcher. I was a wreck. Dirty and burnt after a long day on the barge building docks. As I pulled in between the two pillars, there stood Armer. He looked young and cool standing in his driveway. He must be doing something right, I thought.
He led me straight down the driveway. On our right, we passed a small, beautifully constructed little storybook stone house. Behind the house, dug into a bank, we came to his work area, a high three-sided stone enclosure. One of his employees was leaving for the day. As I introduced myself, Armer showed me a fire pit the fellow had been working on.
It was a ring of brick laid on a precast concrete cover. Armer’s day job is running his business, Contact Stone. He employs mostly young Island guys and specializes in building beautiful stonewalls and structures.
Standing in his work area he said, “I was going to roof it over, but I kind of like the openness and the fresh air.” I agreed with him; it made sense for a stone sculptor to look up at the sky. In this dirt-floored work area rested a small excavator. Near the machine were two
tall granite sculptures in progress. As I started to take in the space and the pieces, I realized here is a hardworking, thoughtful, very talented young guy. The walls were beautiful. They were constructed of long, thick slabs of cut granite that reminded me of slow, sweeping swells in the Sound. The big pieces were broken up by more fanciful yet equally structural smaller stones at whimsical angles, like a short chop. What could have been called a basement was a massive work of art.
The two sculptures in the middle of the space were equally compelling. They were both vertical; one was a single block. Armer works mostly in granite. The piece had been broken strategically and put back together, to form his rendition of a Japanese garden sculpture. It allowed light to pass through chiseled, opposing angles. He said he plans to partially fill the void with smaller stone. The other sculpture was comprised of two upright slabs, higher than me, placed as if ready to dance a tango. You could feel a real tension between the two tall stones. He needs to figure where they will lead him, he said.
Now thirty-eight, Armer grew up on the Island. His dad, Eric Armer, is a welder who worked at Ralph Packer’s waterfront yard and built that remarkable Chinese junk that came out of there years ago.
“Dad was a good welder, but he didn’t really grind down his welds much. He was more interested in the quality than the look of his work,” he said. He showed me an aluminum skiff his dad had made. It sure looked well made to me. It had a real nice shape to it, too.
“Dad’s up in Maine now.” His mom, Deborah, lived next to him on the Island until she passed away unexpectedly this spring. “We worked hard to put this property, about three acres, together,” he said. “It’s good it turned out like it did.”
As we walked around the lot, we got to his house. “It’s insulated concrete,” he said. “Got little air bubbles in it. It really works well.”
The house is a large two-storied affair. Armer said it’s an Italianate design. The place sits sweetly on the partly wooded lot. To the side of the house is a stand-alone (in more ways than one) outside shower. Three sides of the shower are of well-constructed typical wooden slats. The end wall, with the shower head and the valves, is made of seven massive vertical fingers of – you guessed it – granite. It reminded me of the Dolomites in the Italian Alps. Spires of stony non sequiturs, their boney massiveness takes on a spiritual quality in the outside shower. Like the jagged mountains in Italy incongruously frame the lush alpine meadow. Talk about a brick outhouse.
How does he find the time to create all this, I’m wondering.
Armer’s patio is comprised of huge slabs of...two-inch-thick granite. “They were ordered for a job that didn’t pan out, so I had to eat the stone,” he said. It is one of the more impressive patios I’ve ever seen. It also reminded me of places I’d been to in Europe, where it seemed this kind of work was done with a very different sense of time than here in America.
He was showing me some of his gear, including a big hydraulic crane truck, and we were bragging to each other about construction equipment when a lovely lady walked up with a bowl of freshly cut greens. He introduced her as his fiancée, Elizabeth Cecil. (The couple married last August.) I recognized her as the professional photographer who will be taking photos of Armer’s work for this article. Being married myself for more than thirty years, I could immediately see Armer needed to “get a move on,” as they were expected somewhere. I figured, judging from the bowl of salad fixings, somewhere included supper. Exchanging “Nice to meet yous” and “Good byes,” I exited the same way I came in.
As I got in my truck, I couldn’t help but feel how it never ceases to amaze me that these woods and dirt roads of our tiny little Island hide some of the most industrious and creative people I’ve ever met.
There was a time when I thought the younger generations didn’t seem to have the work ethic or drive we thought was needed to get by.
Boy, was I wrong.
The Bottom Course
By Steve Ewing
I have seen
the bottom course
of stone
laid long years ago
stout and solid
bearing the whole load
along its rugged length
Wide and flat
it squats
shifted slightly
from the massive press
as it grew
and settled
Moss and lichen cover up
flecks and smears
the sweat and blood shed
in the ancient cause
of wall
I look for each
bottom course
forever destined
forgotten
overlooked
Way below eye level
Windowless
No soaring tower framing
drifting clouds
No view beguiling
wistful watchers
from some high
romantic
corner perch
The bottom course
thrums with strain
nestled in packed earth
quietly binding
ground to sky
The base of wall
laid by the backs and
minds of men
long gone
Singular and silent
recumbent
weathered and reflecting
So today
as I fix my stare
on your fresh
bottom course
down there
at my feet
I dream
a new wall dream
I hail the care
and grace
portending your shape
yet to be
How you hold your
growing family
of stone so easily
and how this young man
knows them all
by name
Each part of you he has
thoughtfully arranged
as he chips
his young life
into you
He makes his mark
and rises up
in kind
along your roughhewn
wavy lines
Shifting
as pieces of your
granite puzzle
thunk in place
And as he stacks more mass
that you must bear
upright and true
the man grows solid
working next to you
For all our time
we have cut you out
dug you from
the earth
we are both formed from
pushed you standing
ever since we could
stand ourselves
You have carried our
blessed souls
due West
heated with the
slowly setting sun
You mark our place
of rest
in peace
We’ve watched
you track
the planet’s path
sighting our spot
down the cosmic route
we stream along
Your bold and timeless
lines and circles
humble and
define us
So now you choose
this fine man
and guide his restless hands
to coax
your freckled stones
that sing a far off chiseled tune
He has learned to make
you dance
and share your gift
graciously
with care
so silently
he turns you loose
to stand alone
and gaze
across the field
With your soft rock breath
you hum the simple truth
We all were there
as that first course
was laid u.
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