From Plastic Bricks to Acorns and Sticks

Designer David Bird left Lego to create Becorns — a community of magical, miniature beings

David M. Bird
Share
David M. Bird
From Plastic Bricks to Acorns and Sticks
Copy

David M. Bird loved his job as a toy designer for Lego. With a degree in industrial design from the Rhode Island School of Design and a knack for imaginative storytelling, designing action figures for the iconic company ticked all the right boxes. Or rather, almost all the right boxes.

The catch? The job was in Denmark. As much as he liked the country, Bird didn’t feel the urge to make Denmark his permanent home. After five years at Lego, he took a leap of faith and returned home to the United States. What came next was a total surprise, especially to Bird. He could not have imagined it; except he absolutely did.

One sunny day, Bird was sweeping his porch when he noticed a twig that looked distinctly like a bug’s face. He studied the sticks he’d gathered into a pile. This quiet, humble moment of wondering would lead him down an entirely different path, and a wooded one, at that. Bird went from designing action figures from plastic bricks to creating tiny sculptures with acorns and sticks.

Enter the Becorns

Becorns are whimsical woodland creatures born from Bird’s imagination and ingenuity; tiny sculptural characters crafted from materials Bird finds in his southern Rhode Island backyard (and a super-secret spot where he collects the perfect acorns). With these simple, abundant materials, Bird breathes life into these magical, miniature beings.

As delightful as they are, the Becorns themselves are part of a bigger picture. Bird bestows each little being with a carefully chosen name, personality, family, friends, and foes. Like any woodland creature, Becorns have complex social systems; relationships among their clans and with the fellow inhabitants of their biome: squirrels, birds, chipmunks and other backyard creatures. After dreaming each Becorn into being, Bird creates a variety of scenarios intended to reflect the joys, frustrations, and situations Becorns might find themselves in — feeding a chipmunk, battling a squirrel, carrying a basket of seeds home for supper, splashing in a birdbath with a feathered friend. Once he sets the scene, he works to capture the perfect moment in a photograph, a seemingly impossible, perfectly enchanting moment forever frozen in time.

Social media stardom

Most artists recognize that failure is a critical to the creative process; maybe even more than perceived success. Bird will be the first to admit that not all his ideas come to fruition as planned, and in fact, he documented one of these moments in “Attack of the Squirrels,” one of his first videos. Almost overnight, his YouTube channel blew up, and as of now, has amassed more than 176,000 subscribers with his behind-the-scenes photos and videos, enhanced by Bird’s original musical compositions, are art in their own right.

Building a community

Bird has not only built the Becorn universe and an extensive body of work; he also built an ever-expanding Becorns community. Whether through social media or in-person exhibitions and workshops, Bird’s authenticity, affable demeanor, and infectious sense of curiosity draw people of ages to his work and his world. Wherever his imagination next leads him, his fans will be along for the ride.

In a complicated and messy world, Bird finds beauty and charm in the most familiar of places. His blend of imagination and observation give Becorns their universal appeal. They speak a language that everyone understands: one of joy, wonder, and connection, a place most knew once, long ago, but may have forgotten.

Curious? For more whimsy and wonder, watch our award-winning story “Acorns to Becorns” below:

The Providence-based nonprofit and three other arts organizations won a lawsuit, with the help of the local ACLU, against the Trump administration’s campaign targeting ‘gender ideology’
Executive Director Beth Lamarre shares how NAMI RI educates communities, reduces stigma, and prepares for the October 11 NAMIWalks event at Roger Williams Park
Other states created new oversight systems. In Rhode Island, officers still dominate misconduct hearings — and promised transparency measures remain unfunded
The libraries offer a slew of free programming every week for kids and adults at their nine locations around the city. We highlight a few of these events in this monthly segment – from a haunted house to a book club highlighting African American authors
Search for new cinema chain comes as mall is about to hit the sale market
The longtime North Kingstown lawmaker and House Judiciary chair enters a Democratic primary already featuring state Rep. Jason Knight and former AG policy director Keith Hoffmann, with others eyeing a run to succeed term-limited Peter Neronha