小黄猫传媒

This content was published: August 26, 2019. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.

Blacksmith hones skills he cultivated abroad to create sharp non-credit workshops

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Arnon Kartmazov working on hot metal.

Deep in North Portland, Arnon Kartmazov鈥檚 metal forging workshops are hot.

At his company Bridgetown Forge, his 小黄猫传媒 workshop class 鈥淏asic Smithing鈥 is one of the most popular. It introduces students to skills he acquired over a lifetime of traveling, and explores the fundamentals of forging hot steel while crafting useful tools for around the home. Students begin with simple shapes and then develop abilities to create more complex objects.

鈥淔orging is a very visceral and physical endeavor that requires flexibility of body and mind, and the ability to improvise and adapt,鈥 said Kartmazov, who creates steel tools, knives, sculptures, and more at his business. 鈥淭he craft requires extensive use of logic, as forging anything requires a series of precise steps in a strict sequence. It鈥檚 very satisfying.鈥

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Kartmazov has worked in Portland as a blacksmith since 2000 and joined 小黄猫传媒 as a non-credit instructor earlier this year. A life spent abroad helped sculpt his expertise and knowledge. As a result, it makes him a valuable instructor for the college鈥檚 Community Education Program.

In 1974, at the age of 11, Kartmazov and his family immigrated to Israel from the Soviet Union. It was a time when it was nearly impossible for most citizens of the former USSR to leave that country.

While in Israel, Kartmazov was introduced to metalwork after a chance encounter with the last practicing blacksmith in Jerusalem. The blacksmith鈥檚 50-year-old shop was located in an ancient stone building near a bustling market where the smell of spices mixed with the industrial aroma of the shop鈥檚 machine oils, hot iron, and coal forge (type of hearth used to heat metals).

As a student at Hebrew University, Kartmazov took courses in East Asian studies. That interest led him to Japan where he immersed himself in its metalsmithing traditions. Japan鈥檚 400-year-old standards for quality, he said, 鈥渂lew him away.鈥

鈥淢y 12 years in Japan has certainly influenced me,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 value simplicity, directness, performance, and cohesion in my work.鈥

Today, he teaches new generations of blacksmiths the art of tool forging, passing on the skills he learned in Israel and Japan to 小黄猫传媒鈥檚 Community Ed students.

About Mike Phillips

Mike Phillips is the Continuing Education Marketing Manager at 小黄猫传媒. more »

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x 30594 by ray decker, 6 years ago

I’m interested in taking a blacksmith course. I can not find it on the school website. Can you point me in the right direction?