Pat Hammond is not your ordinary artist. In fact, she doesn't even
consider herself an artist. She takes everyday objects, such as spinning
tops and jars of cicada shells, and infuses them with new meaning and
hope. Through humor and personalization, she uses insignificant and
unconventional objects to illuminate a "grand truth" about the world,
and even about herself.
Author Christopher Ornelas found out about Hammond through her
remarkable kite collection--hundreds of kites amassed over twenty years.
Hammond's kites, which have been featured at the Smithsonian and the
Modern Museum of Art, were gathered from every corner of the world,
including Guatemala, Korea, and Polynesia.
Hammond also designs her own kites, drafting ideas and sketches for
numerous creations she has dreamed of flying. While many of these kites
have never made it into the air, they demonstrate her untamed
creativity: a corset on a string titled "Of Corset Flies," a kite made
of chicken wire titled "Flew de Coop." Hammond's idiosyncratic humor
soars beyond her kites, and as Ornelas quickly discovers, they are just
a stroke on the canvas of an artistic life that includes troves of
trinkets laced with whimsy and beautiful intentions, all displayed in
Hammond's home in San Antonio, Texas.
Hammond's love for the unexpected and her fascination with science and
physics are contagious. She is passionate about bees and collecting
honey, and her shelves upon shelves of books touch on subjects as varied
at Goya and Asimov. From her assortment of animal specimens (bird wings,
butterflies, beetles) to crates of small spinning tops (she makes
hundreds of them from round metal discs and matchstick spindles), every
item is an exploration illustrating the heart of an artist and the
legacy of a true free spirit.
With a foreword by poet and friend Naomi Shihab Nye and intimate
photographs of Hammond's home and collections, Name Them--They Fly
Better offers a portrait of a woman who has sought to transform each
moment into a creative act.