This draft got waylaid by work on my article Sculpture Is Drawing In Space that was published last month by the American Bell Association's magazine THE BELL TOWER. It is based on my post of February 13 of the same name.
This stage of the production has not been photographed much before & it is still timely. I've been trying to share studio processes more intimately this design year. I'm pleased to have rediscovered it.
This stage of the production has not been photographed much before & it is still timely. I've been trying to share studio processes more intimately this design year. I'm pleased to have rediscovered it.
A plaster waste mold is poured around the finished wax carving & is paced into a kiln. From inside my original carved wax flows molten... leaving its impression which thus can receive molten silver in turn... transforming & quite accurately translating my wax work into durable metallic form... if all has gone right. There is possibility for metal being too cool, for instance, making for an incomplete casting. Or too much heat can result in a poor surface. All went well this time... WHEW!!!
I now get to analyse & amplify my carving further in this more dense material. The wax, while being the hardest I can find, is much softer than silver. Now more than ever I can tend to sharpening details... inside & out... I can develop the surface to a tighter polish.
Translation is always somewhat rough. The solidification of any dream becomes inevitably more crude at higher resolution. This shift determines the outer limits of available material. Unlike the wax, I cannot add to the form. I can only work inward from here. Growth becomes that beautiful negative so equally requisite...
Here you can see into the pores of a raw cast surface. There have been wild dialogues between my carved surfaces & hardening plaster... between that plaster surface & the flow of molten metal into its cavity... which shrinks while cooling, taking on such a deep complexion...