[PSUBS-MAILIST] Bruce Beasley Acrylic Casting

Alan alanlindsayjames at yahoo.com
Sat Oct 12 15:56:55 EDT 2013


Hi Jon & Hank,
Firstly Hank, no I didn't come across any Biber class submarines. 
   Regarding Bruce; After his success with acrylic he started an acrylic business, however his partner got out of it & set up his own company. He was a bit hard done by. At some point he
chose to pursue art rather than a business career. He is a good friend of Phil Nuytten. They both
have a strong interest in Native American art. 
If we had a conference on the West coast you might be able to talk him in to speaking.
It certainly is an interesting story. 
Alan


Sent from my iPad

On 12/10/2013, at 2:59 AM, Jon Wallace <jon.wallace at yahoo.com> wrote:

> Nice job Alan.  I always wondered where he was, he seemed to disappear after his work with Stachiw ended.  We should see if he's interested in being a guest speaker for a future conference.
> 
> --------------------------------------------
> On Sat, 10/12/13, Alan <alanlindsayjames at yahoo.com> wrote:
> 
> Subject: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Bruce Beasley Acrylic Casting
> To: "Personal Submersibles General Discussion" <personal_submersibles at psubs.org>
> Date: Saturday, October 12, 2013, 1:26 AM
> 
> While in San Francisco I looked up
> Bruce Beasley's contact details.
> He is one of Americas pre- eminent sculptures & a
> pioneer in casting thick sectioned acrylic.
> I thought I was heading to his gallery but it ended up being
> his home & studio.
> For those who are unfamiliar with the story, Bruce was
> attracted to acrylic as a sculpting
> medium but no one had cast it more than two inches thick. He
> managed to cast a 4" thick 
> model of a proposed 13ft x 4ft art work that he submitted
> for a competition for a State of California public
> sculpture. The judges awarded him the prize & finance to
> built it. Unbeknown
> to them the technology to make it didn't exist. 
> Du Pont the acrylic manufacturer told Bruce they couldn't
> offer him technical assistance as he had already exceeded
> what their chemists could achieve, but would supply him the
> raw product free.
> He observed the formation of bubbles in the polymerising
> acrylic through windows in an autoclave & discovered how
> to eliminate them & the cracking, that were the Achilles
> heel of the process. 2 castings later he created The 13ft x
> 4ft casting. He said if he hadn't have made it he could have
> been sued. 
> It was at that point that Jerry Stachiw from the U.S. navy
> approached him to make thick acrylic spheres for deep diving
> submersibles. There were several failures before success
> & the price tag on these failures was the equivalent of
> a new VW.
>    Anyway he ushered me in to his living room
> & chatted away. I have a background in art
> so we related well, & he ended up giving me a book which
> was a retrospective of his sculpture,
> including the story of his acrylic sculpture. I think he was
> quite impressed that someone from N.Z.
> knew his story & had tracked him down.
> He still has the secrets to manufacturing large castings if
> anyone wants to purchase the technology.
> So again I've been totally spoilt.
> Alan
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Sent from my iPad
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