Graham Short takes his art to new levels of achievement with "Cutting Edge"
"Nothing Is Impossible" engraved on the
sharp edge of a razor blade.
I'm always thinking in extremes. Extremes of microscopic levels
of course, the impossible, and it's strange how moments of
inspiration can occur in such unrelated circumstances.
As you may know I swim everyday, 5000 metres at least and that
time spent in the pool gives me time for reflection and
contemplation. It was during one of my swimming sessions that the
concept for 'Cutting Edge' presented itself to me.
A couple of nights before I had watched that iconic film
'Apocalypse Now' starring another creative master, Marlon Brando.
As I slid through the water the improvised line Brando conjured for
his character, Colonel Walter E. Kurtz, replayed in my head...
"I watched a snail crawl along the edge of a straight razor.
That's my dream; that's my nightmare. Crawling, slithering, along
the edge of a straight razor... and surviving"
As I looked down through the water at the white lines running
the length of the pool, just for a split second, I was that snail.
Then it struck me. Was it possible to engrave anything on the sharp
edge of an old style razor blade? My mind answered itself with the
same response it always gives, "Nothing is impossible'. At that
moment, 'Cutting Edge' was born.
After the initial concept I then decided to up the stakes by
selecting the toughest blade available. The quality and strength of
the Wilkinson Sword razor blade is legendary which made it a
natural choice.
The task before me was to engrave 19 letters, within 3 words
totalling 80 engraved strokes. Each letter S for instance required
9 cuts each to complete. I estimated that the height of the letters
would need to be around 5 or 6 microns. When you consider that the
thickness of a human hair is measured at 100 microns you begin to
see the scale of the project.
Working at 400x magnification and monitoring my heart rate
throughout as usual, 'Cutting Edge' was eventually completed in
eight months of pain-staking work and believe me, the blade fought
back on many occasions. I have the scars to prove it.