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Rescue mission

Repairing this will be a challenge. First job is to sink sink penetrating solution into any potential problem cracks.

Then take the damaged part down to viable stone and then work out where to go.

Getting Close

These last couple of days have been spent in experimenting with selectively polishing some areas, using a finishing rasp to add some texture and then giving the whole piece a wipe down with oil.

Wow! Quite intense. I expect that by tomorrow the oil will have sunk somewhat and there will be more differentiation in the colour. We’ll see.

Now… what to place in this hand?

Spot the difference

Hard to believe that i worked on this for seven hours today, the changes are so subtle. Quite a lot of time was spent experimenting with whether to leave tool marks in or not and how much to polish.

where did all that time go?

This was two weeks ago during Felix’s half term. It was doubly good to have the piece worked to a point where i didn’t need heavy duty tools and could get it to my studio at home where i do most of my finishing. The light at my home studio is fantastic and there is also the advantage of being able to see a sculpture from a bit of a distance whenever i am the kitchen.

I’ve been working out how to keep the structure looking active and strong without getting fiddly. I think the back of this hand lends itself to being very blocky.

IT crisis. Big panic as my trusty mac desktop starts to have hissy fits that seem to be more than computer temperament showing signs of impending doom.

Enlist Felix to help me do a comprehensive back up and then take the computer to the doctor to get checked out. Then a very deep breath and go for getting it rebooted back to to factory settings, ditch panther for snow leopard and add some ram.

Scary couple of days there but it all seems to work and my computer seems quite pleased about everything. phew!

Very satisfactory weekend with a sale (Gathering Clouds) at the 20/21 exhibition at the Royal College of Art.

Spent most of what i made immediately, by buying two small judith bridgend paintings which i love more and more each time i look at them.

Actually miss having “Gathering Clouds” here at home quite a lot.

What a relief! No new disasters, relatively few interruptions, just many happy happy hours working away.

From now the decisions are going to be more about how to treat the surface of the sculpture in order to get the best out of the stone.

Went to see the Henry Moore retrospective at the Tate Britain a few days ago. Truly amazing!

surgery required

not the best way to start the week

sometimes you’ve got to take the decision to either abandon ship or keep going, but the surgery is looking quite promising, so on we go.

time to get it back to my workshop at home where the light is great.

Six hours and a lot of aching muscles later

Another day’s work

didn’t have my camera after yesterday’s session so started the day with a photo op.

five hours and two bags of stone rubble later…

Getting Started

I have chosen the stone and decided the subject and spent the afternoon getting the feel for the shapes by carving a pair of hands from a foam block.

The stone is chlorite, which i have not used before but is reckoned to be nicely behaved and polishes to a deep black.

A day later the rubble sacks are filling up.

A different form of carving

Been away from my workbench for a bit too long.

Hope that when I get back to London next week that a new shipment of blue alabaster will be about to arrive.

My first post

This all feels a bit like the first time I held a chisel and a mallet in my hands and took a few tentative whacks at a new piece of stone!

Until a couple of weeks ago I viewed “blogging” with deep suspicion, and how interesting that typing the word now, I find that it is not recognised by Word! I was of the belief that blogging was the preserve of the web generations especially those who spent altogether too much time in front of their screens.

In the conversations with Al and then Chris who are the architects of my new website, I found my preconceptions challenged and exciting new possibilities opening up on how to communicate with anyone who was interested in my sculpture.

All the same, it is a bit like standing at the top of a ski run that is so steep you can’t actually see where your first few turns are going to be but here goes.

One of the things I hope to be able to do on this page is to post a largely pictorial commentary on the creation of new pieces from the raw block to the polished end. Another might be show some of the things that inspire ideas for new pieces like in the practice blogs that Al and Chris put together for me after one of our preliminary planning sessions.

Anyway, I hope that posting blogs will become as routine a task as tidying up my studio at the end of each work session and will be of interest to some of you out there and that I will eventually lose this terribly self conscious feeling I have now.