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Observer14

The Observer
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Deeply Rooted -- In the Storm

I have always been fascinated by how our bodies, and in particular, our arms and shoulders, silently communicate our thoughts and emotions. Working with clay brings us to the fact that the arms are the most slender part of the body, and thus pose some serious technical issues when we create a composition.


One of the first things people ask is whether I use wires or some sort or armature. There are some materials where an armature can be helpful, for example, molding in wax to create a sculpture in bronze, or using some of the modern polymer clay bodies, but unfortunately, natural clay shrinks during drying and firing. This can be reduced by the use of either grog, or “paper clay”, which uses paper or cellulose fibers mixed with the clay to reduce shrinkage. However, with most clay bodies, a fixed armature causes the figure to crack apart as the drying clay pulls away.


However, there are some other useful tricks to creating fluid, graceful arms.


I often start out by building the arms and hands themselves, separate from the figure. This allows me to get the right form and proportions, flowing from the upper arm, the elbow, the muscles of the forearm, to the bulk of the hand. It also allows me to set the two arms side by side, so I start from the beginning with the two being the same size!

Touch the Sky (back)

Clay bodies with higher grog content are often used for sculpture, since the grog not only adds strength to the clay (especially as it is drying), it also helps to even out drying and reduce shrinkage. The grog sometimes makes it more challenging to get a smooth, burnished surface, but it can still be done, as long as you finish the surface before the clay gets too dry and hard.


The more vertical the arm is (lifted up or hanging down), the more structurally stable it will be as the clay is still soft. But, you can create poses with the arms in different positions.


I have an old hair drier which I use to encourage the clay to dry a little faster. This can be tricky though, since the outer surface of the clay starts to stiffen before the core of the arm. This helps the clay to hold up, but any little movement immediately results in the stiffer shell cracking around the softer interior clay. It can also result in the arms drying too quickly, with the result that they are too stiff to move while the rest of the sculpture is still in flux.

Capture the Wind

You can also support an outstretched arm using some other feature, such as a garment, or flowing hair. Sometimes the figure is holding on to something with both hands, so that the two arms are supporting each other.


As the clay is initially beginning to turn leather-hard, it is often possible to prop up an arm or hand with an external stick, wedged under the feature. It helps to put a small ball of clay over the end of the stick to cushion it, so it doesn’t gouge into the arm. I have a wide variety of different sized props to use for this.


It helps to have some large foam pieces where you can lay the entire figure down as you are working on it. You can use smaller blocks of foam, wedged into different areas, to follow the curve of the figure. This gives some time for the clay to start to dry and stabilize until the figure can stand up on its own.


As the figure begins to dry, the process takes on an entirely new set of challenges. The biggest challenge is keeping the drying uniform across the piece, so that as the clay shrinks, it doesn’t create warping and cracking.


One way to support the hand and arm is to rest it on something, either on the figure’s body, or another component of the sculpture. However, the fact that the arm is much thinner than the rest of the figure means that the arm will start to dry–and shrink–much more quickly than the rest of the body. This creates movement and stresses which can lead to cracking in the shoulder, wrist, or elbow, or by pulling the hand away from whatever it is supposed to be resting on. One way around this problem is to take a small piece of plastic bag and loosely wrap it around the arm to slow down the drying. Be careful to not leave the plastic on too long, or you will end up with the opposite problem of the arm not shrinking enough to keep up with the rest of the torso.


This is another place where higher grog content can help in the process. The grog not only adds strength, but it reduces the clay body’s shrinkage, and therefore, warping and cracking. It also helps the clay dry more evenly.


For very small features, like extended fingers, it is sometimes possible to add a little bit of tissue paper to a small lump of clay. Experiment with different amounts of tissue, and make sure it is well worked into the clay. This will add some strength to the clay as it dries. It also reduces shrinkage, which is helpful if you have to go back and alter/repair some feature after the rest of the piece has started to dry.


Creating fluid, graceful poses in sculpture work in clay is a delightful process. One of the advantages of clay is that you can move it around as you are building the figure, in order to create a desired effect. However, the flexibility of the clay, especially in the beginning stages of a sculpture project, pose a daunting set of technical challenges. As an artist, you can address these challenges through a combination of trial and error, practice, experimentation, looking to what tricks others have learned, and maybe even a bit of luck. My encouragement to you is to not give up when a piece you are working on falls over on its face for the zillionth time, but to come back at it, trying something different, and eventually you will master the figure in your own distinctive way.

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I've been noticing an increase of spam "likes" on comments I've made on other people's posts.  When I look at the account, they are obviously bot accounts, with nothing more than a link to an online dating site or similar, and a few hundred "likes" on various people's comments, as a way of sucking in traffic.

I'd like to report the accounts, but unfortunately, they seem to have found a weak spot in the system.  You can report a comment, or maybe even a posting as "spam" or otherwise offensive, but I haven't found a way to mark the "like" they made on a comment, or the account itself as a bot.  I've looked in both Eclipse and the traditional interface, and haven't found anything yet.  Still looking...

Any suggestions?

:/
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WiX Sites?

2 min read

So, just ran across the newest Beta feature -- creating a personal gallery Web site using the WiX platform, and an integrated interface between your Featured gallery on DA, with the gallery on the WiX site. Pretty cool (not to mention a pretty slick advertising ploy to coax you into building a full blown, paid-for account through the WiX platform), and seems to work well. Obviously, they want you to buy a full domain name through them, but for the time being, it seems to work reasonably well (at least for testing) using their default domain.


Link to my current site is: https://charles-tryon-gmail-com.wixsite.com/tryonsculpturearts


One apparent gotcha though... It's no secret that a good percentage of my figure sculptures are tagged with the "mild nudity" adult content flag. One of the coolest features of the integration is the fact that it sets up an automatic feed from your "Featured" folder to the main gallery in the WiX site. However, it appears to filter out any flagged content. I don't know yet if there is a setting to override that filter, but I have not found it yet.


I'd love to hear from anyone else who has experimented with this new feature!

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500 Deviations

1 min read

Well, just added a new deviation here, updating a WIP image I submitted some time ago with the final photo of the finished piece that I finally got around to taking. Noticed that this post put me at the 500 mark! Not sure if that means anything or not... but it was interesting. A milestone at least.

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Copyright?

1 min read

Don't want to start a flame war, but I'm looking for some opinions on US Copyright law. (Yes, I am aware that this varies widely from one country to another.) Also, this is not "legal advice" -- just what people understand.


A discussion came up about an artist who had done a small drawing for a client. They neglected to spell out any specifics as to how the image could be used. Later, they were surprised to find that the client had scanned the small drawing, scaled it up and was using it to make advertising signs. The question was, does the originator of the drawing still own the copyright to this image, even though they sold the original drawing? Does copyright go with the original drawing, or does it stay with the creator?


(The question of whether or not this individual could, or should, do anything legal about this use of the image is altogether another topic!)


Just wondering...

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