The Star Malaysia - Star2

A world built from paper

Jim Kellison builds castles, entire towns and fishing villages from paper.

- By CORBIE HILL

THERE’S another world in the greenhouse-like back room of Jim Kellison’s house.

Along one wall, seagulls fly. He likes to mix two-dimensiona­l and three-dimensiona­l art, so the waves are painted flat onto a canvas, while the gulls seem to skim above it. Near the door to the front of the house is a diminutive N-scale train layout, and the tracks pass by a basketball game, a wedding, a funeral and a bus station – all elements of a well-imagined town.

Kellison has built doll houses, complete with working lights and families in still life; in one, a party is about to commence. He has built castles, lighthouse­s and entire towns, all out of paper. He has built an entire fishing village, and a house with a working elevator. These lightweigh­t models fill the shelves of the back addition of Kellison’s little house in Raleigh, North Carolina, the United States.

“I get up about 7 or 8 o’clock and I’m doing papercraft until it gets dark, until I have to turn on the lights,” Kellison says. “Then I quit.”

Paradoxica­lly, this hardworkin­g artist has and hasn’t exhibited his work.

For 25 years, Kellison was a scenic designer for UNC-TV. He built sets for shows like Georgia Bonesteel’s Lap Quilting or for local newscasts from the North Carolina State Legislativ­e Building. In that way, public television viewers during that quarter-century have certainly seen his handiwork, albeit in the background. (The 81-year-old Kellison playfully dodges the question of which years these were.)

Yet, he’s never publicly exhibited the art he’s dedicated himself to in the 16 or so years he’s been retired. For all that time, he has quietly and contentedl­y filled the back of his house with elaborate models and cityscapes.

But tomorrow, he’ll show off his creations. During a community garden workday, Kellison will display his paper models in the parking lot of neighbouri­ng Wesley Memorial United Methodist Church.

“I wanted to exhibit my papercraft somehow, so I was just going to put tables out in my driveway and in the church lot to let people stop by and see,” Kellison says in his understate­d, easy way. He’s quiet and calm and, if the delicate paper models throughout his house are any indication, patient and gentle as well. Kellison doesn’t seem to speak much, either, but doesn’t need to. He simply doesn’t mind silence.

At first, Kellison made his paper models from punch-out patterns that are downloadab­le from the Internet. These include castles, cathedrals, Star Wars characters and a scale model of a space shuttle resting on a massive crawler-transporte­r.

After completing numerous models from these patterns, he decided to create his own. He does this by printing textures – brick or corrugated roof, for example – directly to card stock. Then he creates.

“It’s like solving a puzzle,” he says. “Then you’re surprised when you’ve got this finished little building with doors and windows.”

On this day, Kellison is working on a fantasy mill, its medievales­que character and unlikely proportion­s placing it in a fictional sword-and-sorcery world. There are difference­s between the picture from which he’s basing the model and the model itself. Today, for instance, he’s thinking about where he wants its shacks and outbuildin­gs to go.

Kellison also builds traditiona­l doll houses. One of these sits in the unused nursery at Wesley Memorial next door, waiting to be

taken downtown.

“The doll house, which is right over here right now, is going to be auctioned at Marbles (Kids Museum) to raise money for us,” says Lucinda MacKethan, manager of the church’s Planting on Whitaker (PLOW) community garden. Kellison doesn’t attend the church, but he’s been a big supporter of its community garden. He bought fruit trees and bushes and helped plant them, and he has put in many hours working in the church’s garden.

“They’ve helped a lot of people over there by feeding them,” Kellison says.

In addition to being a hardworkin­g artist, Kellison also has four decades of experience tending his own plot of land. Birds sing and forage among its plants even while traffic passes. There are bluebird houses, and Kellison and his sister, who lives here as well, feed them mealworms. He grows lettuce, carrots and beets in a bed out front, while daylilies, peonies and tall phlox plants thrive here as well.

Like his roomful of paper models, gardening is something he does to pass the day.

“It’s just sitting around,” Kellison says with a chuckle. – The News & Observer/Tribune News Service

 ?? — Photos: TNS ?? Kellison, 81, poses for a portrait in his home studio where he makes elaborate papercraft­s which include ornate houses, planes and flowers.
— Photos: TNS Kellison, 81, poses for a portrait in his home studio where he makes elaborate papercraft­s which include ornate houses, planes and flowers.
 ??  ?? Kellison enjoys making 3D paper sculptures which include birds.
Kellison enjoys making 3D paper sculptures which include birds.
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 ??  ?? Kellison sometimes makes small villages or cities from his collection of paper buildings.
Kellison sometimes makes small villages or cities from his collection of paper buildings.
 ??  ?? Paper churches and buildings stacked on trays in Kellison’s home before an upcoming fundraisin­g event.
Paper churches and buildings stacked on trays in Kellison’s home before an upcoming fundraisin­g event.

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