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4pm expresso break

I take mine ‘a l’americano’ which means that it is about 30ml, instead of 10, with a sugar. I down it quickly over a short chat with Carlo and Ste, standing by the Lavazza machine.

Today we were discussing National Health Service in UK and Italy (with a brief mention of US, and an american sculptor who didn’t want to go to first aid despite a gushing wound and cut tendon over fears of cost!)

Then I return to my stool and my small wax figures, the delicious taste of sugary rich coffee lingering in my mouth, and a slight head rush and supper alertness from the caffeine rush.

I’m putting together a Pyruvate molecule made out of small figures. The structure is CH3-CO-COOH – the Cs are men, the Os are women, and the Hs will be babies.

I’m developing a technique to make them directly out of wax (so ready for bronze casting), using the brown hard wax as an inner harder armature, covered with the softer modelling wax. It seems to be working ok and its easy to control and change. Although I only just started today so we will see what happens when I start putting them all together.


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We are waiting for snow!

Or so tells me Raymondo, who likes to follow satellite photos and predict the weather. Apparently it tends to only snow in Pietrasanta about once a year, usually in February or March. The temparature has certainly dropped again after a few balmy spring like days, and I’ve had to get my long johns out again!

I had a great morning ‘chasing’ again – i.e. working the bronze to get rid of the sprues etc. I finished the 4th figure, and have nearly finished the legs of the piece.

I learnt a clever trick on how to make the base flat: they have a flat slab of marble which they blacken with the flame of the oxyacetylene torch, then you can rub your piece on it to see which bits of the base are lowest and need grinding down.

My mother has just come in saying its definitely threatening to snow as she’s seen the odd snow flake. Typical – just when my husband and father are coming out for the weekend – although Raymondo also says that it should be sunny on saturday and sunday. I hope he’s also right on that.

Lunchtime, then back to the foundry for some more chasing – I should be working on the main bit of my piece. I then have life drawing tonight at Marcello’s and I need to talk to him about enlarging, maybe next week… I might ask him what he thinks of me going bigger than 3&1/2.


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Fuzione, Sabbiare, Finitura…

On friday, about 3.30pm, I watched my first bronze being poured! My piece is actually now in 5 bits to be cast: the figures and then the support structure were both taken off to be cast separately, then I also cast 2 extra figures in case the first 2 didn’t come out, then we also did 4 extra arms (2 right and 2 left) as the arms are very thin and there was a risk they might not come out. (I have meant to blog about the earlier stages of conversion from wax to bronze but haven’t had time yet, so will do that later – as I also have some nice shots of it all.)

This morning I got to find out if the pieces had come out OK. I went down to the foundry room, and asked them if I could chip out my pieces. Initially one of them showed me how to do it, then I took over. I was using a hammer, and when required a couple of chisels of different sizes. The trick is not to hammer or chisel onto any of the bronze of the actual piece as you can dent it. But you can hammer quite happily on the runners and risers.

I started with the main ‘wave’-like bit of my sculpture. It had been tied up with lots and lots of wire for added strength in the ceramic, so I also had to cut and remove the wire as I went along. A few of the toothpick trees hadn’t come out, but otherwise all was good.

I then did the bamboo legs of the sculpture. I knew my piece so well, but even I had to keep thinking to remember which bits were sculpture and which bits were the sprues. I managed to chip off most of the ceramic of the non-sculpture bits, but the main bamboo rods were all thoroughly covered – so I had to ask for help. In fact what you have to do it bash really hard on the main base sprues, and the vibrations travel along the piece and crack and loosen the ceramic shell!

I then got out the figures out, and again had to resort to help, as I wasn’t brave enough or strong enough to shift the ceramic. However, I did discover that the bronze had managed to get to all the extremities of the figures, and despite the odd crack in an ankle, or a slight fault where the 2 figures meet, it was all in very good shape and would be fine with a couple of solders.

I then left the 5 bits outside the door of the sand blasting room, and was told to come back at 1.30pm for them.

When I got back after lunch, they weren’t quite finished, but I managed to peep through the little hole in the side of the building and caught a little glimpse of them being sand blasted.

The figures were finished, so I took them through to the small metal workshop to start the ‘finishing’ – finitura.

One of the Artigiani soldered the relevant bits for me. They have a very accurate oxyacetylene torch, and I think it was a silver solder they were using. He did a very neat job. One of the others (Roberto I think he is called) told me that I was being helped by a professor! In fact, he was teasing him because he teaches foundry work at the Art School here. He then cut off the sprues for me, and set me up next to Massimo to clean up the piece.

I was given the use of what I thought was a dremmel, but in fact is a compressed air rotary tool. It was an absolute dream to use, not at all comparable to an electric dremmel. I think it goes a lot faster, and seemed to vibrate far less. I started getting used to it, and found I could almost model the bronze, stroking it gently and easily finding the surface of my little figures – the curve of a chin, the crease of a bottom. Given the figures are the equivalent of about 5cm tall, it could have been fiddly difficult work, but by the end of the day, I’d nearly finished the 4th figure!

Tomorrow I start on the main bits of my sculpture!


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Tonight’s meeting:

As I only mentioned this briefly in my post last night – I thought I’d post the information I got on this.

Pietrasanta 25th of February 2010

Dear artists, artisans and citizens of Pietrasanta, Citta d’arte:

On the 5th of March at 17.00, you are invited to an open meeting in S. Agostino

Sala dell’Annunziata, Pietrasanta, Lu Italy

Pietrasanta and the Versilia area is by now world renowned for the exquisite craftsmanship of its artisans in mosaic, clay, metal, bronze, plaster and marble sculpture and ornament for centuries.

Today the artists and artisans are concerned that the future of Pietrasanta as a thriving centre for artists and artisans is at risk.

In 1979 Pietrasanta boasted 120 marble studios; today there remains less than 20. Young people seeking to apprentice the trade of marble carving are few, in part due to the labour-intensive work with stone and in part because of the current social stigma of earning a living working with their hands.

The artists, since the 1960’s had found Pietrasanta and its citizens open to embracing the young sculptors flocking here, having followed in the footsteps of some of the most celebrated sculptors in the world. Housing was inexpensive and many found lodgings in single rooms let by the citizens. Today because of the evolution of the town and surrounding area the cost of housing is prohibitive for young artists.

The cultural legacy of the Versilia and of Pietrasanta in particular is not only a local but also a national treasure. Given the current direction, Pietrasanta will soon become a museum city, losing its capacity to produce works of art; hence, losing the artists, clients and the tourist trade so vital to keep alive this “City of Art”.

Many businesses in Pietrasanta and in Versilia owe a large part of their income to the presence of the artists and their clients, as well as a huge number of tourists who flock to the area year round to see the marble workshops and the fascinating array of international sculptors working in Pietrasanta.

This meeting serves to create an open forum to discuss the current status of the city and its future; to listen to observations, ideas and possible solutions from all those interested in the preservation of a unique town and its magical draw to so many.

We need your participation and ideas.

All are welcome on the 5th of March at 17.00!!

Talk to your friends and pass this email on to your contacts. And invite them all to come too. We need to solve this together.

On behalf of Comitato Artisti Artigiani,

Julia Vance

Contact: [email protected]


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Foundry Life

Sometimes I feel like I’m in a bit of a surreal environment, and I don’t think it is just my partial italian only understanding part of what is going on. It becomes far more surreal as I understand more.

Little Carlo in the wax casting room was 8kgs when he was born – that is over 17lb! (He definitely wasn’t little then, and still isn’t!)

Alfredo was telling me how he likes eating raw garlic and bread. However one day he accidentally ate his mother’s black tulip bulbs! (he pollished off 2 of them even though he thought they tasted a bit strange…)

Yesterday I learnt a new word: Campanilisma – from Campanile, the bell tower that every town has. I was asking Ste and Carlo if they were both from Pietrasanta, and Ste wound up Carlo by telling me that the later had actually been born in Camaiore (the nearest town, only about 20mins away). Pietrasanta and Camaiore have a lot of rivalry, also know as Campanilisma.

The other thing I find amusing in the foundry is the different taste in music in each area. In our wax room we tend to have slightly slushy music – we’ve even had ‘dipinto di blu’! yes, they are still playing it. And another current favourite is ‘da mi tua amore, chiedere mi niente, ho bisogna di te’ yes, lots of love, and then something about green eyes. And to this the artigiani carefully retouch and smooth wax sculptures.

In the wax casting room they are doing more manual work, using the gantry crane to lift and empty moulds full of wax and welding external armatures together. They tend to have more rock and contemporary pop, which also tend to be english speaking music (generally better!).

However, the large metal workshop downstairs has far more pumping music, to go with the sound of hammering metal and angle grinders – the other day they had Dizzy Rascal’s ‘some people call me crazy…’, and this morning they had some pumping harsh italian rap, which really made me smile as I walked past up the stairs.

All in all, I feel very at home in the foundry, and it is sad to think that I’m already over a 1/3 through my stay here.

In other news – tomorrow evening there is a big meeting in town about the future of Pietrasanta for Artists and Artisans. It is organised by some artists who are worried that the local council are forcing most of the marble workshops in town to close. Apparently 15 years ago you would hear the sound of marble being worked all over town, but now is it only in a few places. I get the impression it is due to a combination of new laws about health and safety standards and noise polution, along with the increasing affluence in the town due to tourism encouraging properties to be redeveloped for restaurants or chic appartments.

Anyway, I’ll probably let you know more about this later.


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