In the process of patching the arms on the model in this dynamic pose of a female Gaffer working at the bench. The weight of the piece is focused between her tail bone and sternum. A lot of twisting, turning, pasting, cutting off and re-pasting of the wax is necessary to achieve something that looks in motion and believable. After the pose is stable and looks like it fits the rest of the dialogue that is happening in the piece, I work on bracing and rounding out the shape of the muscles and skin. Then, once everything starts to look natural I can start to detail the areas that need it.
Glassblowers use specific tools to manipulate the glass at the work bench. Two of those tools are the Tweezers and the Jacks. They are very delicate, handmade steel tools. In order to duplicate these in wax, I beefed them up on the interior with clay and then made a silicone mold of them. I had to do this several times before I was able to pull a wax that I liked. When I was able to get a likable wax, I then had to sculpt it down and fit it to her hand. Casting it in glass will be a whole other chapter.
The process of making the wax work bench starts by taking a silicone mold of a pre-existing work bench. Then the silicone is peeled back off the bench and brought to a work space. It is then sewn together at the ripped seams and braced for pouring wax into. The wax pulled from these molds are cropped, and tightened to fit the vision of the final presentation of the piece. The is a lot of back and forth to make sure the gaffer and assitant match up in the scene and line up with the blow pipe.
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Dean AllisonDean Allison is a studio artist working with portrait sculpture and the figure with glass. His studio is in Pittsburgh PA. Dean is working on a commissioned sculpture for our new space in the Newark Arts Common. Follow Dean as he works to create this new significant work of art. Archives
September 2020
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