Arts & Entertainment Scul tunes From W, V " • >A0.044V*1**\ Above, left to right: SUZANNE CHESSLER Special to the Jewish News Bleifeld's conception of Moses with the tablets: "I've always loved reading about history, and I started working on biblical stories because I wondered what the patriarchs looked like. Did they look like Charlton Heston or were they short and bow-legged?" L ee Bleifeld uses the look of live models for his wall relief sculptures, but they never pose. Most don't even know that their faces and forms become the foundation for his large works, many depicting Bible stories and others expressing secular themes. Bleifeld, who grew up in Michigan, recently moved back and currently works out of a studio in Berkley. He has gallery space at the front of his building and terms the space in back an "open workshop," where visitors can observe how capturing people he personally encounters can make the biblical characters come alive. "I've always loved reading about history, and I start- ed working on biblical stories because I wondered what the patriarchs looked like," says Bleifeld, 73, whose artistry encompasses some painting as well as sculpture. "Did they look like Charlton Heston or were they short and bow-legged? "When I do a character, I read up on that character in the Bible and encyclopedias and [have found] they were average people who became what they became because the time necessitated it. "I try to get as much information as I can and then identify the character with people I see, making enough changes so the person is not recognized. I have one model who is always available, and that's the per- son in my mirror." Bleifeld, who returned to his home state with his wife, Renee, to be close to family, decided to dedicate 2/24 1999 68 Another work ins_pired by the Bible is this representation of Deborah as a warrior. A sculpture depicting Abraham and Isaac. "When the angel says stop, I imagine how Abraham would lift up his son and hug him just as hard as he could, which is why I have Abraham with arms and hands outsized to call attention to the hug," says Bleifeld. Left: The artist poses with his sculpture of David his professional time to creative projects and leaves behind a long career in advertising and teaching. "The first pictures I ever drew were of Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck," Bleifeld recalls about his childhood interest in art. "My father brought home things I would get a kick out of copying. As the years went by, I just kept drawing. "I went on to copy paintings of other artists shown in art books, and after the Army, I went to Wayne State University and took all the art courses I could. I transferred to art schools in California and then taught." After assessing the job market, Bleifeld decided to go into design and found work in advertising, although he continued his creative work after hours, first in Michigan and then in Indiana. Ultimately, he opened his own agency and kept up with that until he decided to devote himself solely to fine arts 15 years ago. "I did a lot of things in paper-cast sculpture to hang on the wall," the artist explains. "I moved on to work with polyurethane because it gives the same look as fiber but takes less time and is hard to damage." An important part of Bleifeld's work became syna-