Monday, December 29, 2008

Dan will be the Guest Speaker at the Monadnock Writers Group Jan 17, 2009

January 17, 2009 at 9:45 am - 11:45 am, at the Peterborough, NH Town Library

Please contact the Monadnock Writers Group for more information. 

Since 1976, Dan Snow has been hand-building unique dry stone constructions for clients in New England and abroad. The author of In the Company of Stone and Listening to Stone, he is one of only a handful of Americans who has earned master craftsman certification from Great Britain's Dry Stone Walling Association.
His work has been featured in The New York Times, The Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times, as well as numerous other publications, and he is the subject of the documentary film Stone Rising. Dan lives in Dummerston, Vermont.
 
 

"Listening to Stone" - Recommended for Gift Giving

From The New York Times, Dec 11, 2008 by Anne River

“Listening to Stone: Hardy Structures, Perilous Follies and Other Tangles With Nature” (Artisan, $23.95), by Dan Snow, who has been building stone walls and other structures without mortar for more than 30 years, is practical enough to tempt gardeners to put aside the trowel and start gathering rocks. The photographs by Peter Mauss evoke the powerful spirit of place that local stone imparts. And it’s a pleasure to hear the builder’s voice again, as honest and unpretentious as the stone he advises us to gather from our fields and woods. In describing one project on an old Vermont homestead, he tells of using long slabs to span the gaping holes in a dilapidated stone wall. The result, “Walking Wall,” is like an American Stonehenge.

From The Washington Post, Dec 11, 2008 by Adrian Higgins

"Listening to Stone," by Dan Snow (Artisan, $23.95). Snow, from Vermont, is a master with stones. His work at times rises to the level of land art you associate with British sculptor Andy Goldsworthy (whose work can seen in the National Gallery of Art's East Building).
I love well-crafted stone walls, especially in an appropriately rural setting. When they are assembled well, the walls take on an organic quality. They certainly speak to Snow, who has spent many hours meditating on the meaning of stone as he goes about his work. "A dry stone wall," he writes, "is both a human work framed by nature, and a work of nature touched by humanity."
Readers will have their own favorite projects featured in the book, perhaps the medieval tent -- he calls it an archer's pavilion -- but made of stone; or the perfectly formed fire bowl; or the hillside shelter for sheep, with its stone-tiled roof. One of his earlier works remains to me the most special, a simple stone pen used as a vegetable garden. This rectangle of stone, 100 yards long in total, took him three months to build. As with his favorite projects, he harvested the stone from the remnants of old field walls on the property.
Snow could get his stone from a quarry, but he prefers to take it from the same land it will adorn. "Going up into the woods assigns a value to stone that can't be gained by any other means. They are discovered in a state of innocent repose, all supine, snuggled together on the forest floor in peaceful splendor. My wish that they remain undisturbed has never been as strong as the itch I've felt to build something with them."

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Book Events this Weekend 12/13 - 14


Please join Dan this weekend for two events celebrating his new book, Listening to Stone.

Saturday December 13
The Vermont Book Shop
38 Main Street
Middlebury, VT 05753
802-388-2061

Sunday December 14
Yankee Bookshop
12 Central Street
Woodstock, VT 05091
802-457-2411

Sunday, December 07, 2008

Give the Gift of a Stone Walling Workshop


Give the gift of a Great River Arts Institute stone walling workshop!
Program Director Alexis Doshas is hard at work scheduling Great River Arts Institute (GRAI) workshop dates for 2009, and the season will be kicking off on May 9 and 10 with the ever-popular dry stone walling workshop with Dan Snow.
Please check the GRAI site frequently for the full schedule and descriptions as they become finalized. Contact Alexis at GRAI for details about gift certificates and future workshops.

Listening to Stone - Featured in Brattleboro Reformer

Jaime Cone, Reformer Staff writer, interviewed Dan recently about his work and new book, Listening to Stone. The article was featured in the Brattleboro Reformer last week and the full article is now available in the Reformer on-line archives.

Here is an exerpt from the article:
For his newest book, Snow wrote all the prose that accompanies the photography by Peter Mauss.
The book contains what Snow describes as "essays on the nature of wall building and its history, and the enjoyment of spending time working in the environment with basic tools."
"There's definitely an interest and people who want to get their hands on stone. If people are interested in looking at using technology and materials as a way of interacting with their home ground and the spaces around them, stone is the way to do it."