Ian Judd - sculptor:
Reading the description of what is wanted by the
company/person offering work. After thinking of some initial ideas, He
looks at ways he could put them together or expand them - if making a
sculpture of a train - for example - he will look at train books and
visit railway stations (especially if a steam train). He has his own
style - which generally is obvious in much of his work, but he is not
afraid to work in a different style or exactly to employer
specifications. He works mostly in metal concrete and stone - often
making maquettes out of polystyrene and wax, any gates are a bit more
difficult to make a maquette for and hundreds of diagrams will be drawn
up before settling on a final piece. he does much of his casting
himself, so he can also advise contractors/employers on what sorts of
materials would be best to use and how - for example a gate he's working
on at the moment he has been asked about making the gate by casting it
with cast iron - which he says is too weak and would cost much more than
the methods he would like to use.
For his own work, he makes a figure relating to an idea he has had using
wax or clay and continually reworks it till he feels that it suits his
personal brief. Once made his maquette, he will either make another
version, using again, clay or wax, but also carved polystyrene to make a
mould from - and make a mould and statue from that using plaster,
cement, or a metal - or he will carve the figure into stone
Arist is a family member : http://studiosculpture.eu/stone.htm
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