I had a little bit of an afternoon off – or at least out of the Foundry… Pietrasanta feels a bit like being a student again, where you can just cycle over and pop in to visit people!
After lunch I visited another foundry. I had met an american sculptor called Julia from Atlanta, who had told me she was working at the Fonderia Del Chiaro, where they do investment casting. She kindly offered to give me a tour. In some ways investment casting is very similar, but instead of using thin layers of liquid and powder to build up a ceramic shell on the wax, they use a thick investment which seemed to be a mix of plaster, sand, brick dust and there was even a pot of what looked like saw dust. The pieces ready to be poured looked like amazing bee hives, or large terracotta urns!
One of the main differences is that when they are making the wax in the mould, they pour in the central investment before taking the wax out of the mould. This means that the wax is very robbust, and it is easy to retouch without any steel structure around it. This is what had drawn Julia to this foundry.
She showed me 3 small pieces outside that were part way through the patination stage. The were models for larger pieces that she had already done: a horse which was very dynamic, and a double portrait of 2 boys – which had been a life size and mounted in a swimming pool, and a Saint with 2 small babe at her feet. She was also working on some interesting new pieces in both wax and clay.
I also saw a lovely big studio they use for doing enlargements and sculptures. It has a stunning bronze cast of Michaelangelo’s David. It has been years since I saw it, and it was stunning seeing it so close up, and looked good with a lovely new patina on. I must go to Florence soon and revisit my old favourite italian masters :)
I was also interested to see a steel and chicken wire armature of an abstract piece with expanding foam in it (which I’ve been using in the UK recently).
Overall the foundry was very different from Mariani’s – it felt fairly quite cosey, definitely a lot smaller and a bit slower paced whereas Mariani is an amazingly efficient and professional outfit, powering through large quantities of work, with each artigiani team specialised in a small part of the process. But Del Chiaro (from what Julia said) also has like Mariani amazingly skilled and creative Artigiani.
I am constantly amazed at Mariani’s how they take the time and care to do things in the best way possible, rather than the constant pressure you find in most modern life to cut corners and time to make more money. If they don’t have the right tool or equipment for something, they make it.
I have since found out that Mariani’s method is a lot more accurate and better at capturing detail, but Del Chiaro’s are able to do very large (5m I think) casts in one piece.
After leaving Del Chiaro’s, I popped into Marco Giannoni’s Marble Studio (which is nearby) to see how Hakon was getting on, and maybe to get sight of the marble sculpture of his daughter before it went to Oslo. Unfortunately I was too late – Hakon had left on Tuesday, and the sculpture was just being lifted up in its crate and loaded onto a truck. It turns out his show opens next week! Instead I popped over to see Giuliano Correli who was progressing with his marble carving of a man standing with octopus arms round his legs – and I found out about a resin he uses that is non-toxic: plasticrete (might have to investigate this, as the bioresin I use in the UK is very difficult, but I don’t want to go back to the nasty polyurethane stuff that is carcinogenic…)
I also had a long chat to Marco Giannoni – he is really friendly and was telling me all about helping Hakon setting up his last show in Norway 2 years ago, and how cold and dark Norway can be in winter! He was also telling me how difficult all the logistics with marble are once you leave Pietrasanta, as people don’t understand how heavy yet fragile they are.
I then had tea and an interesting catch up with Helaine.