Showing posts with label bronze foundry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bronze foundry. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Creation of Bronze Garden Sculpture


Dear Art Lover,
     Ok, I just finished one page about my new bronze sculpture "Rock Towers and Frogs."  It has a lot of images about the process I went through to create the piece and some of the foundry work.  I will have more in the next art newsletter that I am starting to write now.. after a wee break from the computer.  Thank you for your interest.  Please share this page if you enjoy it.  http://www.borsheimarts.com/sculpture/2016/RockTowersFrogGardenSculpture.htm

Peace,

Kelly

P.S.  Please check out the “Raccolta e Regalo” sale I am having on selected artworks.. good through Dec 31, 2016.  http://www.borsheimarts.com/SaleArt2016-LaRaccoltaeIlRegalo.htm

Subscribe to the art newsletter here (it is FREE):  http://www.borsheimarts.com/contact.htm


Insulation foam used for sculpture armature
Insulation foam used for sculpture armature

Driving the sculpture to Pietrasanta, the city of Sculpture Italy
Driving the sculpture to Pietrasanta, the city of sculpture

Thursday, October 13, 2016

Wax Sculpting Foundry Pietrasanta Italy



Dear Art Lover,
     Yesterday I went to Pietrasanta, Italy, to work with the waxes for my new bronze sculpture in progress, "Rock Towers and Frogs" / Torri di sassi e Rane [in Italian].  I am grateful to my many neighbors who help me get to the nearest train station.  I can take the buses, but the hours are not always convenient for the train schedules.  Besides in Pescia, the bus station and the train station are about a 20-25 minute walk away from each other:  Not exactly convenient.  
 
Artist Kelly Borsheim chases her own sculpture waxes, Italy
Here I am chasing my own sculpture waxes, Italy. Foto Da Raymondo
Raymondo chases a wax sculpture part in bronze foundry in Pietrasanta, Italy
Raymondo chases a wax sculpture part in bronze foundry in Pietrasanta, Italy
     I am also grateful that I can walk to the foundry in about 10 minutes from the train station in Pietrasanta.
Once there, I was introduced to Raymondo in the wax-working department.  He is really kind and even spoke with me later about my knee injury, the “interesting” situation with doctors (and a professor) about healing [Raymondo was an avid rock climber and hiker until a recent injury], and other fun stuff.   

     He got me set up at my own little work space and explained to me how this foundry does a few things.  Each foundry works in different ways and I am always delighted to see how.  He knows his work and he also gave me advice on how to transport my molds when I move them from Texas next year.  He also took this shot of me working on the elephant ears of my new composition.

     It was fun to have the wax in my hands again, with the torch’s constant flame nearby. The guys had the radio playing.  I am always astonished at how often American or English-language music is played in Italia.  But a smile widened on my face as I heard the cute Italian man working two stations away from me lower his voice to sing along with Johnny Cash.  What other song could it have been but “Burning Ring of Fire.”  So cute to hear the voice get lower and lower to sing in an Italian accent, “down, down, down…”  Man, you cannot make this stuff up!  Later, the other men chimed in when the radio play Frank Sinatra’s version of “New York.” Of course, you know that crooner is well-known in Italia!

     Raymondo also allowed me to stay working through lunch, while all the men left for an hour break.  So, I snapped these shots of my surroundings as I snacked on apples I had plucked from my landlord’s trees the morning before.  I was grateful for the extra time since I had to leave early to be able to catch a ride home last evening.  
bronze foundry in Pietrasanta, Italy wax sculptures,plasters and molds
bronze foundry in Pietrasanta, Italy wax sculptures,plasters and molds

bronze foundry in Pietrasanta, Italy wax sculptures,plasters and molds
  
     After lunch, I got called over to watch Simone create the wax sprues for the leaves I had finished prepping.  One neat little trick they do there:  Each leaf had a number written into the wax to help the foundrymen know exactly how to reassemble my sculpture once it is in bronze.  I had asked Raymondo if I needed to fill that in with wax now, knowing that it would be difficult to reproduce the surrounding texture in metal later.  Simone showed me that his work included filling in the number just before spruing, so there is no confusion or error.  He replaces the inscription with a small wax button with the same number scratched into it.  The button is more like a thumb tack.  Once the piece is in bronze, the tack is very easy to break off and only leaves a small hole instead of a scrawled number.  Brilliant!  In the photo you may be able to make out the light brown circle just inside the right-most leg of the “bridge” of the sprue he has wax-welded onto the spine of the elephant ear.

Simone creates a wax sprue for later bronze casting
ID thumb tack is inside of sprue leg on right
Simone creates a wax sprue for later bronze casting
Simone creates a wax sprue for later bronze casting



















     
     The rest of the images are pictures of my waxes that still need to be chased (cleaned up/sculpted to a finish).  The Lost Wax Method of casting bronze is a many-stepped and complicated process.  But bronze allows me to create slender extended parts (that the stone medium does not lend itself to) and metal was perfect for this project.

     You may see images of the intended composition in clay, wax, and foam here.  Also, please note that the lower special pre-casting price offer continues through 1 November 2016.  Contact me if you would like to enjoy Rock Towers and Frogs in your own home. Thank you!


    
Peace,
Kelly


P.S.  Happy Birthday, Danielle! 
Wax parts frog cattails rocks of future fountain
Wax parts frog cattails rocks of future fountain

Wax working tools on stand above torch under a suction fan
Wax working tools on stand above torch



















Wax sculpture parts await chasing for bronze casting
Wax sculpture parts await chasing for bronze casting

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Kickstarter Countdown



Dear Art lover,
     I guess that I am the APRIL FOOL!!!  My bronze sculpture Kickstarter art project ends 5 pm Texas (Central) Time Zone, NOT midnight CT.  I thought that I was choosing the clock to be on US time where I was basing my project.  Instead the midnight hour apparently refers to my physical location when I launched the project:  Croatia!  

     As I write this, we have only one day left to raise the goal funds for the bronze casting foundry for my wax sculptures.   Here is the Kickstarter Stat line:
30 backers
$9,810 pledged of $11,500 goal
24 hours to go

     Oh, we are so close… with Kickstarter.com, I only get the pledges for the foundry if enough people jump on board and together pledge to the goal amount.  It is all or nothing.


hanging on... pledge on Kickstarter art project     We are so close and I really appreciate your interest and any participation, if so moved.  I have created reward levels so that any amount you wish to contribute can help me send you some art in a variety of forms.  If there is one of my artworks that you would like to own, but do not see it on Kickstarter… make a pledge and we can work out the details on switching the rewards later.  Your pledge could even serve as a down-payment for a future artwork, if you prefer.

See prices here for sculpture:  http://www.borsheimarts.com/pricelist.htm

     The Future is Unwritten, but we always have choices!  Check a few of those out at: 

[and if you are curious about the sculpture this shadow belongs to, check it out here:



Now I am ending on April Fools Day.
Probably appropriate. Lol.

Casting Call: I’m Melting . . . Melting! Into Bronze

Destroy to Create: Melted wax sacrificed to pour bronze sculpture. Hot art: Make it happen before these wax figures are truly lost.

Thank you so much for helping me make some bronze art a reality,
Kelly

~ Kelly Borsheim, sculptor, painter, writer, teacher

P.S.  The really good news is that this is the last blog post about Kickstarter (except maybe a small part will share the final outcome with you).  And then, we get back to art and Italy!  Whoot!