View a slideshow of Joseph Castle’s work.
Once cooled from its molten state, bronze is an almost immovable media. Bronze sculptor and local artist Joseph Castle doesnāt pour the liquid hot metal personally, but first makes a moldāthe shell of the work he is hoping to createābefore overseeing his foundry-manās pouring.

The artistās bronze relief work currently shows at Allan Hancock Collegeās Ann Foxworthy Gallery in the exhibit The Things We Carry, which, though the sculptures are solidly static, evokes dynamic imagery tied to deep roots of mythological form. Castle utilizes a variety of material when creating the molds, but nothing gives the still sculptures a sense of lively movement or deep symbolism like animal bones, he explained.
āI love collecting bones, especially where we used to live in Idaho,ā he said. āBones symbolically kind of radiate regeneration, rejuvenation, or a life that has gone past thatās recycling itself.ā
Castle calls his work in The Things We Carry symbolic archetype sculpture. He hopes to address the sometimes-subconscious symbols found throughout mythology and religion to explore themes of life, death, and transcendence.
āThe symbolism is also intertwined with spirituality,ā he said. āI come from a Judeo Christian background, but every culture has a mythāthe story of the hero is seen throughout thousands of faces.ā

The symbolism of regeneration is found not just in the forms heās created, Castle explained, but in the bronze itself, which must go through intense changes to yield a sufficient relief sculpture. Those adjustments in the creation process allude to the transformation that so many spiritual and religious traditions believe occurs at death.
Castle created much of the exhibitās pieces after his father passed away and uses the work to reflect and forge a narrative arc that keeps him connected with his departed family. The strong emotional turmoil of loss bubbles below the surface of the sculptures, which have a stoic character that exudes transcendence over struggle.
āPeople always ask me if it was brutal, but really, it was one of the most beautiful things my father could ever do for me,ā he said. āI want people to say, viscerally, āWhy am I still here looking at this work?āā
The Things We Carry truly comes full circle, with a piece named after Castleās wife. All that emerges from the cold bronze relief is the form of a birdās nest complete with two hatched eggs, which symbolize the coupleās newborn twins.

A former English teacher, Castleās work reflects his own personal heroās journey, similar to the adventures he draws on from mythology for other works in the show. One piece, Battle with Grendal, symbolizes the eternal struggle we all face while paying homage to a classic heroic myth.
āYou know, weāre not that different from that guy who decided to write about Beowulf and his troubles; we find it every day,ā he said. āI wanted to be a writer, I grew up thinking I would be a writer, but I just work better in three dimensions, I guess.ā
The Things We Carry is open for viewing Mondays through Thursdays from 9 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. and Fridays from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. through April 29 in the Ann Foxworthy Gallery on Allan Hancock Collegeās Santa Maria campus.
Arts Editor Joe Payneās deadlines are a weekly heroās journey. Contact him at jpayne@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Apr 16-23, 2015.

