So You Wanna Sculpt?

As I began writing this, an image from the 80’s show “Fame” came to mind. Miss Grant, the uber dance teacher, pounding her staff on the floor saying the iconic line from the series: “You got big dreams? You want fame? Well, fame costs. And right here is where you start paying, with sweat…”

So you wanna sculpt? Well, right here is where you start playing…with clay.”

playing with clay in our studio

To inspire your sculpting, there’s a link at the end of this post to a “You Are Awesome” Spotify playlist that we created just for all of you.

Sculpting, Round 1

We are frequently asked what’s the best way to start into sculpting. Wow! That’s an enormous topic featuring a boatload of information. Detailed specifics on the many approaches to sculpting will take many posts, but for a basic “How do I start?,” read on.

Sculpture can be created with just about anything: clay, bronze, polymer, aluminum, wax, wood, steel, epoxy, Elmer’s Glue, ice, rice, butter, blood… you name it and probably someone’s tried it (and most likely created something pretty spectacular with it).

lead, ice and butter sculptures

CW from upper left: Jasenko Đorđević’s pencil lead sculptures, miniature ice sculpture, butter cow

Sculpting is a magically sensory experience. Creating a piece that will be viewed from all angles involves a unique decision making process. Even if your ultimate goal is digital sculpture and 3D printing, getting your hands dirty working with clay will improve your modeling in the virtual world. For 2D artists, knowing a bit about sculpting can help with creating rough models to show the fall of light on your subject. Besides, it is so much fun!

Introducing the heavy hitters

Water-based clay (Terra cotta, Earthenware, Paper clay)
Pros:
-It just feels soooo good! You get it in your hands and naturally start squishing it and wanting to make something. It is pliable, sinfully tactile and malleable.
-Inexpensive (usually around $15 for 25 pounds), so if your sculpting dreams are big, this may be the way to go.
-Great for sketches, immediacy.
-Once fired, it will be on this planet forever (clay sculpture has been found from 30,000 – 40,000 years ago).

Cons:
-Equipment: water-based clay has to be fired to around 2000º F to become permanent – your kitchen oven’s not going to cut it.
-Heavy and fragile.
-Requires specific knowledge of building techniques so as to keep parts joined together and prevent cracking as it is dried and fired.
-If building large, it has a tendency to want to collapse.
-Must be kept damp while working – this can be stressful if you have other things on your plate.

terra cotta bust

“Neptune” by Adam Lambert-Sigisbert, Terra cotta, 1725

Oil-based clay (Plasticene, Plastilena)
Pros:
-moderately inexpensive: $15 for a 2-pound block, but it stays pliable indefinitely and can be reused over and over.
-used with armatures which allows for more freedom in choice of pose
-plays well with mold materials (other than sulfur based versions – avoid this even though it has a wonderful workability)
-take as long as you want to work on a sculpture
-different available hardnesses allow flexibility in working through large areas or small detail areas

Cons:
-if you want your sculpture to be permanent, you must make some form of mold and go through a casting process (whether bronze or resin) to create a finished product
-workability not as satisfying as water-based clay

plasticene sculpture

“Wind in the Waves” (details) Colin Poole, plasticene original

Polymer Clay (Sculpey, Kato Clay, Fimo)
Pros:
-bake at 275º F, so can be finished at home.
-can be baked repeatedly through the stages of sculpting, so detail work can be quite refined
-take as long as you want to finish a sculpture
Cons:
-Expensive $2.50 for 2 oz., 1 pound for $15
-plasticky feel – for me, not a satisfactory tactile experience
-generally not as effective for larger-scale work

Sculpey sculpture

“Tinkerbell” Patrick (‘the Small’) Masson, Sculpey

Bozzetti

For our purposes today, we’re going to talk about starting with simple water-based clay sketches. We wouldn’t typically begin a painting without some preliminary sketches. Sculpture is similar. With the malleability of water-based clay, we can create a rough gestural sketch in 20 minutes to 3 hours that will allow us to see the sculpture idea from all sides and remedy the problems before we invest our time in a full-scale version. Here are some examples of clay sketches-both contemporary and historical.

clay sketches

Colin Poole, Quick gestural clay sketches

 

Sumo wrestlers clay sketch

Leroy Transfield’s sketch of two Sumo wrestlers captures tons of information about the action of the sculpture in a simple dynamic gesture.

 

Carpeaux Ugolino

“Ugolino” clay sketch by Carpeaux

 

Barye clay sketch

Barye’s clay sketch of a lion attacking a bull communicates all the dynamism of the narrative

Bozzetti, or maquettes, are more refined versions of clay sketches that are then used as “models” for full scale versions of sculptures.

Oh yeah… tools

Your best tools are at the end of your arms, but yes, if you are going to seriously get into sculpture, you will need some tools outside of your hands. Before investing in piles of tools you may or may not like let alone use, you could go on the cheap and find things around your house to experiment with. Alternately, Amazon has various sculpting tool sets for $7 – $25 that would give you a decent start and help you find out what you like.

clay tools

1-loop tools are useful for carving clay away, 2-a variety of wooden tools are used to shape planes and refine details, 3-ball tools are used for texture and tiny details, 4-these steel tools are great for clay detail and working on waxes. These are two of my all time favs, 5-texture tools, 6-Mud Tools throwing rib is great for smoothing surfaces and impressing lines between forms, 7-knife for cutting and shaving, fork for joining parts with slip in water-based clay (and sometimes for eating), 8-wire helps cut chunks of clay efficiently

Let’s Go!!!

1. Get clay (probably for most with busy schedules, this is a good first assignment for this month. For you superstar overachievers, carry on)
2. Open bag
3. Take some clay out and start to play with it-squish it, roll it, pinch it, move it around – see what it does.
4. Don’t judge yourself – enjoy the process of playing with a new material and see where it takes you. Cut yourself some slack – you’ve had most of your life to become skilled with a pencil – it will take some time to get acquainted with clay. Most of what you do, you will squish up and remake into something else later – no pressure.

If you come up with something you really like, you can dry it very slowly and find a friend with a kiln or a local clay studio to fire it for you for a fee. Generally you don’t want clay thicker than 1” anywhere on your sculpture if you’re going to fire it (most clay sculptures are hollow as are bronzes), but I have gotten away with thicker if I dry it (and fire it) super slowly.

Now, if you end up making something like this, CALL US and we’ll help you figure out how to get it fired! Seriously – I mean it.

bozzetto satyr and nymph

Satyr et Bacchante by James Pradier, clay bozzetto

A tiny, little wrap up H*Art to H*Art Chat

As you launch into sculpting, be patient and have fun with it. Try to put the inner critic to rest and give yourself freedom to just play, which leads us to our final topic, the Ad Hominem Artist syndrome. There can be a lot of distressed energy running around the internet regarding being an artist – maybe it’s a touch of the winter blues or the slow down/let down between convention seasons, but whatever the source, as I see it, you all are waaaaay too talented to be getting down on yourselves like that.

The Ad Hominem Artist
While being an artist is all most of us have ever wanted and most of us spend a good part of our days doing just that, the process of creation often goes south for a bit somewhere in the middle. Whether we’re creating a new personal piece, putting together a show, doing a commission or presenting work to the public, the process of creation often goes something like this:

1. I looooove this idea!

comic image

2. This is harder than I thought/isn’t going how I planned/

isn’t getting the response I’d hoped for/isn’t working

comic image

3. This sucks!

comic image

At this point, we can get drawn into the “Retrograde Amnesia Spiraling Vortex of Doom” wherein we forget every success we’ve ever had as an artist, every person who’s ever bought our work, every positive thing that’s been said or written about our work, every person who’s shared our posts on social media and start thinking maybe we should just get a job, because then we might at least get health insurance.

4. (Therefore…) I suck.

comic image

When looking at our work through the “I suck” glasses, not much looks very good and we can get very sad. At some point, we get back to work and find:

5. Hey – this really isn’t so bad after all

6. I looooove this idea!

The real trick seems to be not allowing ourselves to slip from 3 to 4. When in level 3, we can still engage in problem solving, starting with changing our way of thinking and speaking about and to ourselves. For instance, saying “I am a failure” has quite a different effect on our mind and belief structure than saying “I just experienced failure.” With the former, we label ourselves and are in danger of believing the negative thought to be true. The latter puts the negative judgement about ourselves and who we are firmly in the past and leaves room for us to be something else in the present.

Attack the problem, not the artist. Instead of saying, “My work sucks and I’m a failure,” we can say, “I have experienced failure, and boy did I learn a lot from that one! Now, what am I going to do about this sculpture of mine?” Maybe it’s starting over (my second go at a sculpture has always been better in my experience), getting some feedback from a trusted friend, learning something you don’t know yet, trying something different and so on.

If you’re really stuck, do something that feels like you’re taking care of yourself or doing something special for yourself or that lets your mind wander and sort through the issues when it’s not under pressure to create. For me, it’s taking a jog/hike with the dogs, European fashion magazines, Ulta, cappuccinos and chocolate…or weeding (but that’s a topic for another time). Just be mindful not to get sidetracked for too long – we never know how much time we really have to create all our imaginations have envisioned.

You Are Awesome!

For the times when you could use a little “atta-boy-girl,” click here for the kcpoole “You Are Awesome!” playlist we created for you on Spotify. https://open.spotify.com/playlist/7EuhmOqTU2lio0TFuplssJ

 

Keep creating and happy sculpting!