- Bronze sculpture
Bronze is the most popular metal for cast metalsculptures ; a cast bronze sculpture is often called simply a "bronze".Common bronze alloys have the unusual and desirable property of expanding slightly just before they set, thus filling the finest details of a mold. Their strength and lack of brittleness (ductility) is an advantage when figures in action are to be created, especially when compared to various
ceramic or stone materials (seemarble sculpture for several examples). These qualities allow the creation of extended figures, as in "Jeté", or figures that have small cross sections in their support, such as the equestrian statue of "Richard the Lionheart". Modern "statuary bronze" is 90%copper and 10%tin ; older bronze alloys varied only slightly from this composition. [Caleb Hornbostel, "Construction Materials: Types, Uses and Applications, Second Edition" (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1991) p. 175.]But the value of the bronze for other uses is disadvantageous to the preservation of sculptures; few large ancient bronzes have survived, as many were melted down to make weapons or to create new sculptures commemorating the victors, while far more stone and ceramic works have come through the centuries, even if only in fragments. The great civilizations of the old world worked in bronze for art, from the time of the introduction of the alloy for edged weapons. The Greeks were the first to scale the figures up to life size. Few examples exist in good condition; one is the seawater-preserved bronze now called "The Victorious Athlete," which required painstaking efforts to bring it to its present state for museum display. Far more Roman bronze statues have survived. The ancient Chinese, from at least 1200BC, knew both
lost-wax casting and section mould casting, and in theShang dynasty created large ritual vessels covered with complex decoration which have survived in tombs. Over the long creative period of Egyptian dynastic art, small lost-wax bronze figurines were made in large numbers; several thousand of them have been conserved in museum collections. From these beginnings, bronze art has continued to flourish.Process
Making bronzes is highly skilled work, and a number of distinct casting processes may be employed, including lost-wax casting (and its modern-day spin-off
investment casting ),sandcasting andcentrifugal casting .Lost wax method
In lost-wax or investment casting, the artist starts with a full-sized model of the sculpture, most often a non-drying oil-based clay such as
Plasticine model for smaller sculptures or for sculptures to be developed over an extended period (water-based clays must be protected from drying), and water-based clay for larger sculptures or for sculptures for which it is desired to capture a "gestural" quality - one that transmits the motion of the sculptor in addition to that of the subject. A mold is made from the clay pattern, either as a piece mold from plaster, or using flexible gel or similar rubber-like materials stabilized by a plaster jacket of several pieces. Often aplaster master will be made from this mold for further refinement. Such a "plaster" is a means of preserving the artwork until a patron may be found to finance a bronze casting, either from the original molds or from a new mold made from the refined plaster positive.Once a production mold is obtained, a wax (hollow for larger sculptures) is then cast from the mold. For a hollow sculpture, a core is then cast into the void, and is retained in its proper location (after wax melting) by pins of the same metal used for casting. One or more wax "sprues" are added to conduct the molten metal into the sculptures - typically directing the liquid metal from a pouring cup to the bottom of the sculpture, which is then filled from the bottom up in order to avoid splashing and turbulence. Additional sprues may be directed upward at intermediate positions, and various vents may also be added where gases could be trapped. (Vents are not needed for ceramic shell casting, allowing the sprue to be simple and direct.) The complete wax structure (and core, if previously added) is then invested in another kind of mold or shell, which is heated in a kiln until the wax runs out and all free moisture is removed. The investment is then soon filled with molten bronze. The removal of all wax and moisture prevents the liquid metal from being explosively ejected from the mold by steam and vapor.
Students of bronze casting will usually work in "direct wax", where the model is made in wax, possibly formed over a core, or with a core cast in place, if the piece is to be hollow. If no mold is made and the casting process fails, the artwork will also be lost. After the metal has cooled, the external ceramic/clay is chipped away, revealing an image of the wax form, including core pins, sprues, vents, and risers. All of these are removed with a saw and tool marks are polished away, and interior core material is removed to reduce the likelihood of interior corrosion. Incomplete voids created by gas pockets or investment inclusions are then corrected by welding and carving. Small defects where sprues and vents were attached are filed or ground down and polished.
Creating large sculptures
For a large sculpture, the artist will usually prepare small study models until the pose and proportions are determined. An intermediate-sized model is then constructed with all of the final details. For very large works, this may again be scaled to a larger intermediate. From the final scale model, measuring devices are used to determine the dimensions of an armature for the structural support of a full-size temporary piece, which is brought to rough form by wood, cardboard, plastic foam, and/or paper to approximately fill the volume while keeping the weight low. Finally, plaster, clay or other material is used to form the full-size model, from which a mould may be constructed. Alternatively, a large refactory core may be constructed, and the direct-wax method then applied for subsequent investment. Before modern welding techniques, large sculptures were generally cast in one piece with a single pour. Welding allows a large sculpture to be cast in pieces, then joined.
Finishing
After final polishing, corrosive materials may be applied to form a
patina , a process that allows some control over the color and finish.Another form of sculptural art that uses bronze is
ormolu , a finely cast soft bronze that is gilded (coated with gold) to produce a matte gold finish. Ormolu was popularized in the 18th century in France and is found in such forms as wall sconces (wall-mounted candle holders), inkstands, clocks and garnitures. Ormolu wares can be identified by a clear ring when tapped, showing that they are made of bronze, not a cheaper alloy such asspelter or pewter.culptors
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Benvenuto Cellini
*Donatello
*Lorenzo Ghiberti
*Giambologna
*Leone Leoni
*Adriaen de Vries
*David Ascalon
*John Bridgeman
*Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux
*Czesław Dźwigaj
*Alfred Gilbert
*Maggi Hambling
*Martin Mayer Modern
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Henry Moore
*John W Mills
*Enzo Plazzotta
*Auguste Rodin
*Stanisław Szukalski
*Lorado Taft
*Bill Toma
*George Tsutakawa
*Gerard Tsutakawa
*Felix de Weldon
*Leonard Wells Volk
*Harry Weber
*M.L. Snowden
*Zoja Trofimiuk
*Jorge Melício culptural subjects
People
*
Andrew Browne Cunningham , inTrafalgar Square ,London ,England
*George VI of the United Kingdom , at Carlton House Terrace, London, England
*Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson - relief panels of his Victory atCape St Vincent , and Death
*A conversation with Oscar Wilde by Maggi Hambling, installed in Adelaide Street, near Trafalgar Square, London in 1998
*"Shepherd and Sheep" byDame Elisabeth Frink Paternoster Square
*"Young Dancer" byEnzo Plazzotta , on Broad Street, London
*"Temperance", a statue atop a drinking water fountain to the north end of Blackfriars Bridge, London
*In theNational Statuary Hall Collection ,United States Capitol , Washington, 55 statues, including:
**Edward Lewis Bartlett
**George Clinton
**John Campbell Greenway
**Ernest Gruening
**Eusebio Francisco Kino
**Joseph Wheeler Abstract and symbolic
Animals
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Charging Bull - byArturo Di Modica , in Bowling Green park nearWall Street inNew York City
*Mustangs at Las Colinas
*Nelson's Column - Sir Edwin Landseer's Lions guard the diagonalsReferences
ee also
Public Art External links
* [http://afe.easia.columbia.edu/china/art/tch_brnz.htm#Great%20Bronze%20Age%20of%20China MMA exhibition of Shang Dynasty ritual vessels]
* [http://canal-educatif.fr/Video/Arts/014-Porte-Enfer-Rodin/Anglais/Gates-Hell-Rodin.htm A 26min film about Auguste Rodin and the Gates of Hell]
* cite web |publisher= [http://www.jepsculpture.com James Peniston Sculpture]
url= http://www.jepsculpture.com/bronze.shtml
title= Flash animation of the lost-wax casting process
accessdate= 2007-10-24
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