Sculpture is the art of shaping hard materials such as stone, metal, glass, or wood. There are two basic sculpting processes - additive, where material is added, and subtractive, where material is removed. Common sculpting techniques include carving, modeling, casting, construction, and digital sculpting. Types of sculpture include freestanding sculptures, relief sculptures, statues, kinetic sculptures, and many other categories defined by their materials, placement, or movement. Sculpture has been an important art form since prehistoric times.
2. SCULPTURE
ď‚– Sculpture is three-dimensional artwork created by
shaping or combining hard materials - typically stone
such as marble - or metal, glass, or wood. Softer
("plastic") materials can also be used, such as clay,
textiles, plastics, polymers and softer metals. The term
has been extended to works including sound, text and
light.
ď‚– Found objects may be presented as sculptures. Materials
may be worked by removal such as carving; or they may
be assembled such as by welding, hardened such as by
firing, or molded or cast. Surface decoration such as paint
may be applied.
ď‚– Sculpture has been described as one of the plastic arts
because it can involve the use of materials that can be
moulded or modulated.
ď‚– The word sculpture originates from the Latin word
sculpere, which means "to carve".
3. Sculpting Processes
ď‚– Additive Process
The sculptor builds the work,
adding material as the work progresses.
Modelling, construction, and assemblage
are additive processes.
ď‚– Subtractive Process
The sculptor begins with a mass
of material larger than the finished work
and removes material, or subtracts from
that mass until the work achieves its
finished form. Carving is a subtractive
process.
4. Techniques
inSculpture
CARVING
Dating from pre-historic times, carving is
a process in which the artist subtracts or cuts away
from a solid material to reach the desired form. It
can be a very painstaking and time consuming
method because of the hard and weighty
materials, such as marble or other stones, that are
often used. However, artists also carve softer
substances such as wood and even soap.
6. Techniques
inSculpture
Casting
Casting is a method of obtaining the
permanence of a modeled work by making a mold
and casting it in a durable material such as bronze.
Two methods of casting are used: sand casting and
the cire-perdue or "lost wax" process.The lost-wax
process is more widely used, however, both have
been frequently employed since antiquity.
7. Techniques
inSculpture
Construction and Assemblage
Emerging in the twentieth-century, the
techniques of assemblage and construction
consist of combining and joining various materials
to form a three-dimensional object. These
methods originated from the technique collage,
which was popularized by the Cubists during the
early part of the twentieth century.
8. Techniques
inSculpture
Digital Sculpture
also known as sculpt modeling or 3D sculpting, is the
use of software that offers tools to push, pull, smooth,
grab, pinch or otherwise manipulate a digital object as
if it were made of a real-life substance such as clay.
9. Kinds ofSculpture
ď‚– Free Standing Sculpture
sculpture that is
surrounded on all sides, except the
base, by space. It is also known as
sculpture "in the round", and is
meant to be viewed from any angle.
10. Kind ofSculpture
ď‚– Jewellery
The word jewellery is derived from
the word jewel, which was anglicized from the
Old French "jouel" circa the 13th century
Further tracing leads back to the Latin word
"jocale", meaning plaything.
It is in a form of personal adornment,
manifesting itself as brooches, rings,
necklaces, earrings, and bracelets. Jewellery
may be made from any material, usually
gemstones, precious metals, beads, or shells.
11. Kindof
Sculptures
ReliefSculpture
are sculptures
thatarestill
attachedtoa
background;
Types of Relief Sculpture
(1) Low Relief(basso-relievo, or bas-relief), where the sculpture
projects only slightly from the background surface;
(2) High Relief (alto-relievo, or alto-relief), where the sculpture
projects at least half or more of its natural circumference
from the background, and may in parts be wholly disengaged
from the ground, thus approximating sculpture in the round.
(3) Mid Relief (mezzo-relievo), a style which falls roughly
between the high and low forms];
(4) Sunken relief, (incised, coelanaglyphic or intaglio relief),
where the carving is sunk below the level of the surrounding
surface and is contained within a sharpely incised contour line
that frames it with a powerful line of shadow.
12. Kind of
Sculpture
ď‚– Kinetic Sculpture
involves aspects of physical motion;
notable examples are fountains (the
sculpture is designed with moving water) and mobile
sculpture.
13. Kind of
Sculpture
Statue - representationalist sculpture depicting a
specific entity, usually a person, event, animal or
object.
Types
ď‚– Full statue
ď‚– Bust - representation of a person from the chest up
ď‚– Equestrian statue - typically showing a significant
person on horseback
14. Kind of
Sculpture
ď‚– Stacked art
a form of sculpture formed by assembling objects and
'stacking' them
ď‚– Architectural sculpture
sculpture infused with the architecture of the building
ď‚– Environmental sculpture
sculpture that creates or alters the environment for the
viewer, as opposed to presenting itself figurally or monumentally
before the viewer.
ď‚– Sound sculpture
an intermedia and time based art form in which
sculpture or any kind of art object produces sound, or the reverse.
Most often sound sculpture artists were primarily either visual
artists or composers, not having started out directly making sound
sculpture.
ď‚– Light sculpture
Light art or luminism is an applied art form in which
light is the main medium of expression. It is an art form in which
either a sculpture produces light, or light is used to create a
"sculpture" through the manipulation of light, colors, and shadows.
15. “I say that the art of
sculpture is eight
times as great as any
other art based on
drawing, because a
statue has eight
views and they must
all be equally well
made."
Benvenuto Cellini
Italian Baroque goldsmith and
sculptor1500-1571