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What started as
a hobby only 10 years ago has become a second career for this
multi-talented doctor/artist.
“I’m trying to
live my life like tomorrow is my last day, like I wouldn’t
change anything,” the 43-year-old Seraly says. “I’m living my
life right now. I didn’t want to wait until I was retired from
medicine to pursue art, so that’s why I’m doing both right now.”
Art is a“great
release” for a man who sees patients 12 hours a day, Monday
through Thursday, just so he can take Fridays off from his
medical practice to sculpt. Although the two professions
seemingly have little in common, Seraly says his medical
background helps with his art, and vice versa. “What I’ve
learned medically allows me to be a better sculptor,” says
Seraly, whose art focuses mostly on Native American people and
situations. “And what I’ve learned artistically helps me when
I’m doing a procedure like facial surgery. So both careers lend
themselves well to each other.”
Seraly is an
“additive sculptor,” creating his work from wire stick-figures
and adding material until it is a complete form. This process
differs from the form used by artists who work with stone or
wood and chip away until they arrive at a desired result.
Each of Seraly’s
pieces can take four to six months to complete and usually range
in size from 18 to 36 inches, although he has done life-sized
sculptures. Seraly dedicates approximately 15 hours a week to
his art, including an occasional hour and 45 minute drive to
Zanesville, Ohio, where his work is cast at a local mill.
Seraly spends
between $1,000 to $3,000 on materials and casting for each
piece. He displays some of his art in the waiting room of his
McMurray medical office, but he sells his art mainly through his
website at www.seraly.com. His works range in price from $2,000
to $18,000, but Seraly says he isn’t in it for the money. “I
started doing this as a hobby in my basement 10 years ago, and I
would have never imagined when I started that I could now say
that my work is in public, corporate and private collections,”
he says. “It really makes it fun.”
One of his
sculptures now sits on the campus of Washington & Jefferson
College, where Seraly received his bachelor’s degree in biology.
(He received his medical degree at Jefferson Medical College in
Philadelphia.) Seraly also recently received a commission from
the town of Hickory, PA, to sculpt a six-foot bronze statue of a
farmer holding a calf. The bronze sculpture will be placed in
the center of town, and Seraly hopes to start the project after
funding and permits are secured from the local government.
Sandy Youngblood, a patient of Seraly, has purchased two of his
pieces, including a 24-inch figure titled “Noble and Proud” for
which she paid approximately $5,000. “Whatever Mark does,
whatever he touches, he does well,” Youngblood says. “It’s
wonderful because he loves both of his professions, and he is
very good at both of his professions. And above all else, his
patients love him.”
Seraly grew up
in Succasunna, a town in northwestern New Jersey once inhabited
by the Lenni-Lenape Indian tribe. The area’s rich history helped
fuel his interest in Native American art, and a trip to Rome,
Italy, when he was 10 “planted a seed” in him that eventually
sprouted into his sculpting passion.
Although Seraly
did his undergraduate studies in Washington, Pa., he did not
intend originally to settle permanently in the Pittsburgh area.
The Pittsburgh Steelers managed to change that. Seraly attended
the last game the old Cleveland Browns played in Three Rivers
Stadium before moving to Baltimore and becoming the Ravens. The
team held a contest in honor of its 60th anniversary and Seraly’s name was picked out of 60,000 in attendance. He
received 60 years of Steelers’ season tickets. “I remember
calling my wife and telling her to tell her mother that we were
going to be here for at least 60 years,” he says with a laugh.
“That’s how fate brought me to stay out here in western
Pennsylvania.”
Seraly
and his wife, Loretta, have four children, one of whom he hopes
will take over his business and continue his passion for art
some day. But Seraly has no plans for early retirement, either
as an artist or a dermatologist. “I don’t think dermatologists
ever retire. They just ride off into the sunset,” he says.
Seraly’s creativity isn’t limited to his art. He recently
trademarked and registered the first ever “tele-medicine online
site”that allows patients to e-mail him pictures of their
condition. Seraly can then analyze their condition based on the
photos and return an “e-prescription.” He likes to call the
concept “dermatology
e-consultation,” something he hopes will take hold in other
areas of medicine. “Patients love it,” Seraly says. “If you have
a chronic, stable condition, and all you really need is refills,
why go in for an office visit when you can just go online and do
an e-visit? That then allows other people who really need to use
that time slot in the office to use it more efficiently.”

18 Pittsburgh
Professional Magazine
Noble and Proud The sculptor at work
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