Miami Herald

92-year-old uses wine corks to re-create the Eiffel Tower – while battling leukemia

- BY GRACE DICKINSON Philadelph­ia Inquirer

PHILADELPH­IA

Walter Deuschle likes a challenge. At 92 years old, he’s out trimming bushes and pulling weeds. He’s planting grass seeds, praying for new growth. And on most mornings, he’s inside his home art studio, picking up a paint brush or a sculpting utensil.

His latest project? A 7 1/2-foot-tall Eiffel Tower made entirely out of wine corks. Across nine months, Deuschle used a Swiss Army knife to chisel nearly 2,000 corks into building blocks. It’s a meditation he credits with helping him get through not only the pandemic, but a much larger personal challenge.

In January 2019, Deusbluepr­ints, chle was diagnosed with leukemia. He never saw it coming, nor would he let it kill his spirits.

“I’ve had some breakdowns mentally – even though I passed 92, you still want to be young, to stay vigorous and productive,” says Deuschle. “But I look at chemo the same way I look at the Eiffel Tower, a challenge I’d overcome.”

Deuschle goes to the doctor for chemothera­py treatments monthly, each time for four days in a row. Naturally, he’s tired. Most afternoons he spends lying down or taking naps, especially in the days following treatment. But there’s rarely a day where he doesn’t first spend at least 30 minutes, and usually far longer, working on his art.

“It helps me generate energy – it requires concentrat­ion, and you need to develop energy to concentrat­e, and that helps me spirituall­y,” says Deuschle.

His wife, Mary, has talked with his doctor about the Eiffel Tower.

They both view it as a form of medicine.

“It was an extreme, extreme help during this time,” she says. “He’s not one to sit around. This gave him purpose, something to look forward to, and that’s what you need, especially when you have a health issue.”

About 10 years ago, Deuschle and his wife visited the real Eiffel Tower in Paris. The most memorable part for Deuschle was sharing a meal inside its first floor restaurant, which offers views of the Trocadero Gardens and the Palais de Chaillot. But he says the inspiratio­n for his project had little to do with their trip.

“I have this little replica, maybe 12-inches tall, and I picked it up one day, and just said to myself, ‘This is it’,” Deuschle says. “The Eiffel Tower was a real challenge, and I wanted that challenge.”

Yes, another challenge to be conquered. He got to work on the tower in January, drawing rough

carving corks, and then using Elmer’s glue and a few wire rods to put it all together.

“It took me about three tries to come up with the bottom arch, but the hardest part was actually the long tower at the top because it’s all one piece and everything needed to be perfectly uniform to stay level,” says Deuschle.

Lit up on the first level of the tower is a recreation of the restaurant that Deuschle remembers most. He calls it the “Tiffany Room,” complete with four miniature Tiffany lamps, as well as little chairs, a table, and a carpet all made from cork. The room overlooks a courtyard filled with eight miniature street lights, fake green trees, cork-crafted benches, and a burgundy accented plaza that utilizes corks from red wine bottles.

Deuschle came to Philadelph­ia in 1956 from Stuttgart, Germany, to work as a chef for the company that became Aramark. He moved up the ladder, then managed a country club before retiring 25 years ago. He picked up the cork-carving hobby in retirement as a way to keep his fidgety hands occupied. In the 15 years since, he’s completed dozens of sculptures.

The Eiffel Tower stands as his tallest, finished three months earlier than expected. It’s one of the few upsides of the pandemic, he says.

“I thought it’d take a full year but the coronaviru­s gave me an opportunit­y to work on it every day,” says Deuschle. “My wife says I have a lot of patience for this, but I lack a bit of patience for everything else,”

He and his wife have five kids combined from previous marriages. But because of the pandemic, they seldom get to see them. Like many their age, they’re cautious, living sometimes painstakin­gly low-key.

“But we’re not afraid,” says Deuschle. “We listen to the doctor, we keep our distance.”

Once the pandemic dies down, he hopes to share the tower with as many people as possible. His dream is to have it displayed in a museum or somewhere for the public to enjoy.

“Now that it’s finished, I feel relieved,” says Deuschle. “Sometimes I sit there, and I’m looking at my creation, and then I’m looking around for the guy who put it together.”

 ?? TIM TAI Philadelph­ia Inquirer/TNS ?? Walter Deuschle needed something to pass the time during the pandemic and to help him power through chemothera­py. So he built the Eiffel Tower with about 2,000 corks over nine months.
TIM TAI Philadelph­ia Inquirer/TNS Walter Deuschle needed something to pass the time during the pandemic and to help him power through chemothera­py. So he built the Eiffel Tower with about 2,000 corks over nine months.
 ?? TIM TAI Philadelph­ia Inquirer/TNS ?? Miniature tables and chairs replicate a restaurant inside Walter Deuschle's Eiffel Tower.
TIM TAI Philadelph­ia Inquirer/TNS Miniature tables and chairs replicate a restaurant inside Walter Deuschle's Eiffel Tower.

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