Studio Diary; Landscape Project pt 2.

The tortuous kiln-loadings/ fab firings of the Tumble Commission are nearly back on schedule.The Landscape Project started in April with photographer Stephen Foote (http://www.stephenfootephotography.co.uk )getting some depth.Time to review it and have a bit of a think…

Up is Down IX, 57cm W,

Up is Down IX, 57cm W,

Bracelet Bay , Stephen Foote.

Bracelet Bay , Stephen Foote.

Up Is Down- in progress

Up Is Down- in progress

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Up Is Down- in progress

Up Is Down- in progress

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Bracelet Bay, Mumbles, Swansea by Steve Foote.

Bracelet Bay, Mumbles, Swansea by Steve Foote.

in progress, Aug 2014.

in progress, Aug 2014.

 

 

Bracelet Bay, Mumbles, Swansea by Steve Foote

Bracelet Bay, Mumbles, Swansea by Steve Foote

Before the Busts and while the Tumble Commission was drying we did the trip to Porth Yr Ogof Cave near here and spent some hours in there setting up photographs. Steve was very busy with his thing and I held lights and stopped the groups of excited, awe-struck children Caving from bumping into equipment. It gave me a long time to stand in the shallow river in the darkness listening to the echoes of voices and water disappearing into the mountain’s warren of tunnels. Amongst many other fabulous ones Steve got this picture

Porth Yr Ogof Cave, Brecon Beacons, by Stephen Foote.2014

Porth Yr Ogof Cave, Brecon Beacons, by Stephen Foote.2014

and over the following month I made these pieces; OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA They are 30cm wide or less, each one has a central ‘cave’ and some naturalistic elements. This was when the narrative involving the Wyvern joined in. The Bird is the above -ground landscape from the Tumble Commission and the Whale is the water… beautiful images full of movement….

I am privileged to have special access to the excellent writer  Daniel Buck (http://altamiraultimatum.co.uk). He is heavily involved in the story-telling in digital Games and other contemporary Media and we regularly disscuss the myths and icons  of the Natural World. He knows my work better than anyone and has been an invaluable influence.I am going to turn to him next and see what frame work he might see in this.

 

 

 

 

Studio Diary, The Landscape Project, part 1

Busts in progress, Aug 2014.

Busts in progress, Aug 2014.

Lots of changes, lots of layers.This is the main photo I am  focussing on; The sky, the land and the ocean and man’s presence – everything is integrated.

Bracelet Bay, Mumbles, Swansea by Steve Foote.

Bracelet Bay, Mumbles, Swansea, by Stephen Foote, 2014.

These 2 pictures and the experience of being in both these places is never far from my mind these days.

Porth Yr Ogof Cave, Brecon Beacons, by Stephen Foote.2014

Porth Yr Ogof Cave, Brecon Beacons, by Stephen Foote.2014

A narrative is emerging that involves the passage of water from the Beacons’ sky to the ocean at the bottom of the Swansea Valley. The Tawe River passes the Studio and the ground beneath us is full of  tunnels from the rivers and from mining. The Wyvern, a dragon with a wonderful mythology about guarding the treasures of the subterranean world entered the picture when I was heavily involved with the history of local Coal Mining and  the Pit Marker Sculptures and it is re-emerging here. OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAThe next clay-armature is more specific now that I have a clearer idea of where I’m going.

3rd Bust armature in progress, Aug 2014.

3rd Bust armature in progress, Aug 2014.

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in progress, Aug 2014.

in progress, Aug 2014.

 

 

 

 

 

Studio Diary; Return to the Figurative

in progress, July 2014

in progress, July 2014

An intense couple of months ending in a merciful bereavement has lead me back to the clear boundaries and challenges of Figurative sculpture. Portrait skills are hard won and need to be practiced regularly or they will be lost.

I’ve been playing around with the technique of building outwards from a framework that wont be hollowed out later and/or is a visible part of the form for a couple of years now and  I wanted to try it with naturalistic work.

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The River,a commission. 1.5 m high

The River,a commission. 1.5 m high

Half a Century II, 48cm H x 32cm W.

Half a Century II, 48cm H x 32cm W.

I started with the exercise Lloyd Lilly taught us at Boston Uni (about 300 years ago); Make the skeleton and layer on the muscles and skin. It is fascinating to do and hugely informative. These are the skills that give Abstract work presence.

Anyone who has taken one of my Workshops will tell you, with tears in their eyes, that the key to figurative work is organising the huge amount of information into manageable stages and that the Skeleton is just a stick figure with the perfect proportions simplified for you.OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA    OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAI’m not sure how I manage to be so thick but once again I made a clay armature for a bust that allowed the head to tip forward. Good thing I have that red broom on hand to prop it up.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA  With the 2nd one I made a much more interesting frame that would show in places.

in progress August 2014

in progress August 2014

It allowed me to work on the whole form from the outset  rather than build from the bottom up. I’m pushing myself hard to use new methods rather than fall into the same ol’ pitfalls and to be more expressive with the naturalistic format rather than only technical. I’ve done that many times before… but the results were pretty dire! This may also be yet anther very bad road but it’s the only route to get somewhere interesting. I’m aiming to integrate the figure with it’s landscape following the ideas of the Up Is Down Series. Wish me luck….!

Clay armature for a bust, aug 2014

Clay armature for a bust,  aug 2014

This clay armature is much stronger and the hollow spaces are more defined as part of the form good and early. The plan is to work towards integrating the Landscape work I’ve been doing with Cameraman Steve Foote using his stunning photographs.

Bracelet Bay, Mumbles, Swansea by Steve Foote

Bracelet Bay, Mumbles, Swansea by Steve Foote

Bracelet Bay, Mumbles, Swansea by Steve Foote

Bracelet Bay, Mumbles, Swansea by Steve Foote

Bracelet Bay, Mumbles, Swansea by Steve Foote.

Bracelet Bay, Mumbles, Swansea by Steve Foote.

Brecon Beacons, by Steve Foote.

Brecon Beacons, by Steve Foote.

Porth Yr Ogof Cave, Brecon Beacons, by Steve Foote.

Porth Yr Ogof Cave, Brecon Beacons, by Steve Foote.

This could take a while….

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Studio Diary, The Tumble Commission, part 6.

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You learn a lot about your own work from watching a skilled Photographer taking pictures of it. You get a more objective view. The lights are certainly a merciless test of your planes and edges. Stephen Foote’s top quality lenses will pick up every flaw.

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I went over the whole piece with fine portrait tools and his perfect pictures reward that. I’m very inspired by the excellent craftsmanship of  stone or glass artists like Sally Fawkes (http://www.sallyfawkes.com ) her process is incredibly harsh and difficult yet she doesn’t back off until her stunning sculptures are flawless. Clay is way easier but avoiding marks when you are handling the piece is a constant battle

Sally Fawkes 'Perceiving Significance II' photo ;Richard Jackson

Sally Fawkes ‘Perceiving Significance II’ photo ;Richard Jackson

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After a spell of controlled drying it’s time cut the sections. Luckily I have a fantastic Assistant, Michael Preece. I spent a lot of time  planning the cuts; we have opted for large sections and I needed to ensure they would fit in the kiln and be handleable. Mike  used a variety of tools to make the cuts and he and my son Daniel lifted the sections to thick memory foam where they will stay for at least a month.

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Working in clay you always have an eye on the Drying and Firing -Plan; accommodating  these long drying periods where the atmosphere needs to be controlled and having the right sized pieces ready to pack nice full kilns that will distribute the heat evenly.

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I went round all the edges of the cuts and tidied them and repaired any dings. I will cover the sections with sheets to ward off drafts and turn them regularly. Most cracks form at this stage although they may not show up until after the Firing.

 

 

 

Studio Diary; The Tumble Commission, part 3.

The shape looks crazy at this point.

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The first draft of the details can go on; the most important thing right now is to get good joins for the clay.

 

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OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA When the clay has hardened these can be touched up by carving with a delicate tool. These images were taken from archive pictures of 2 mines and the Railway local to Tumble. Apparently the Train that ran from Great Mountain Colliery was the first ever passenger line.

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I’m using smaller coils and each stage is taking longer.It is just approaching the point where the central hole will form and the top edges start to meet- lets hope my measurements were right! If it doesn’t meet properly I’ll cut out large sections and re-do them.

The props are getting more inventive!

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Those out-side supports will stay in place until after the upper parts are cut and lifted off. In theory it would be self-supporting….but if it collapsed it would do it fast! The final, fired and installed Sculpture will have cement and steel rods inside so it will be strong enough to climb on.

The Edge Series

The Edge Series has been on going for years, decades really, though not always under that title. The sculptures are abstract. Many are very personal but a lot of them are informed by films, books like The Life of Pi, other people’s stories and, of course, music is always in there, especially that of guitar god Steve Vai.

The landscape and our connection to it is often the narrative setting. Although there may be a figurative influence  it is a figure from the earth, not us. The relationship in South Wales with the land is literally deep from decades of mining and the Welsh have a beautiful word for their bond to their home-land, ‘Hiraeth’. The wonder and danger of coal has coloured the culture and heritage here for thousands of years and the evidence of that blends in with the natural landscape so ubiquitously that it’s hard to tell them apart.

Along the cliffs of parts of the spectacular coast-line here in Wales you can see seams of black coal in the rock. Geology shaped by water and time is very much part of The Edge narrative.

The mountains of the Brecon Beacons are ancient and worn by the wind and water. The highest, Pen y Fan, has a very figurative form rather like a sphinx that you can see in the Balarat Pit Marker, a Public Sculpture from The Edge Series.

Pen Y Fan by Chris Goddard,Wales.

Pen Y Fan by Chris Goddard, Wales.

Balarat Pit Marker , Blaengarw,Wales,6m long.

Balarat Pit Marker, Blaengarw, Wales, 6m L x 2m H.

Balarat was very much about our fraught relationship with oil and coal and the sadness of the Land at the tragedy a gift can cause.

I joke that The Edge is about Death but it’s not actually that clear cut. Boarders, turning points, changes we choose or that creep up on us all have an edge we need to pass. These sculptures are about reaching that point and the many, mixed emotions we get about it. Essentially there are two places shown with a door between them. The emphasis can be on any part.

Forms with holes have always held us.

Men-an-Tol,Cornwall,3000-5000 years old. (photographer unknown)

Men-an-Tol, Cornwall, 3000-5000 years old. (photographer unknown)

Monument Rocks , Kansas , USA ,photographer unknown.

Monument Rocks, Kansas , USA photographer unknown.

Here is a collection of the Edge Sculptures. I’ll keep adding to it as I get new Images.

The Edge , May 2013

The Edge, May 2013

The Edge,May 2013

The Edge, May 2013

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The Edge, 38cm L x 32 cm H
The Edge,43 cmm L x 25 cm H x 24 cm D

The Edge, 43 cmm L x 25 cm H x 24 cm D

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The Edge I , 52 cm h.This on-going series is about the boundaries between our worlds and out hopes and fears about them.

The Edge I, 52 cm h.

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Calon Lan Memorial Garden,The Feel Good Factory,Bryncynon,Wales

Calon Lan Memorial Garden, The Feel Good Factory, Bryncynon,Wales

A playful version designed with the Cefn Pennar Youth Club for their football field

A playful version designed with the Cefn Pennar Youth Club for their football field.

Cefn Pennar Dragon , back view.

Cefn Pennar Dragon, back view.

Wonderfully people have started sending me  amazing Edge type images.

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Building Brick Sculptures on a Monumental Scale.

Whole buildings are built from clay-mud all over the world. They last for centuries and can be huge. They are all built  basically like coil-pots.

I build the structure of the big sculptures in much the same way, add on  the artwork and  then cut them up (hollowing where necessary) for firing. These days I use this method for most of my sculpture but with smaller pieces (under 2 metres)I work quite intuitively. The big ones you need to plan like a military campaign because supports will need to be built in from the outset in order to be rigid enough to work and to cut the piece up. Budgets must be stuck to and Volunteer’s time is very precious.

Parc Calon Lan, Blaengarw , South Wales

Calon Lan, Parc Calon Lan, Blaengarw, South Wales.

Ocean Colliery Pit Marker,5m long x 2 m high, Blaengarw ,South Wales

Ocean Colliery Pit Marker, 5m long x 2 m high, Blaengarw, South Wales.

This is a very different method from building with un-fired Bricks, which is mostly a subtractive, carved process. Using the raw clay allows for a lot of adding and modelling. They are both great techniques and Gwen Heeney’s excellent book ”Brickworks” is well worth reading. It is full of good advice.

Llanharran's hourse and Cefn Pennar's Dragon,in Groundwork's Polytunnel,Aberdare.

Llanharran’s horse and Cefn Pennar’s Dragon,in Groundwork’s poly-tunnel, Aberdare.

After talks/workshops with the local community, research, writing a plan-of-work, time-table  and making a  Scale Model, draw the out-line of the sculptures foot-print onto the floor.

Using very soft  Brick-clay  lay down first layer at around 5 cm thick. Allow to stiffen. Soften top edge w/ water, rub to a slip, add next layer (approx 10kg clay ‘coil’ 40cm long), ensure good join, draw the clay upwards. You can get about 30 cm in height. You can lay a strip of plastic along the top to keep that edge soft for the next join. Joints must be perfect so that the final sections are strong enough to handle.

Calon Lan ;1/2 way up, basement of the Sculpture Studio,Katie St,Blaengarw.

Calon Lan; 1/2 way up, basement of the Sculpture Studio, Katie St, Blaengarw.

Note the finger marks; leave these: use them as strengthening for the walls in the manner of corrugation.

Calon Lan,Blaengarw

Calon Lan,Blaengarw

Inner ‘Support Walls’ are built thinner, inside the form. Clay supports shrink with the Sculpture. They will be discarded and re-cycled when the Sculpture is cut up.

Memorial to Gito Neath Bran ,Llanwonno,built w/ Groundwork Aberdare

Memorial to Guto Nyth Bran, Llanwonno, built w/ Groundwork Aberdare.

Like all coil-pots, lower sections are wrapped in plastic to prevent over-drying; you will need to be able to cut through all layers so they must not get too hard and over-drying/shrinking will cause nightmare cracks. The thickness of the walls can be reduced as you go up to reduce weight.

Memorial to Gito Nith Bran,Llanwonno,

Memorial to Guto Nyth Bran, Llanwonno.

Chunks of memory-foam can be put inside to support horizontal walls; the foam will shrink w/ the clay.

Memorial for Maerdy Workingman's Hall built in the Polytunnel w/ Groundwork,Aberdare

Memorial for Maerdy Workingman’s Hall built in the polytunnel w/ Groundwork Aberdare. On the bottom-left of this sculpture you can see a clay support holding up that leaning wall, built in from the first layer. This will be removed once the huge weight (2 tons) of the upper parts of the sculpture are cut away during the dismantling .

 

Balarat Pit Marker built in Pontycymmer w/ The Creation Development Trust , Blaengarw

Balarat Pit Marker built in Pontycymmer w/ The Creation Development Trust , Blaengarw

Wooden supports can’t shrink w/ the form so may cause bad cracks but they have their place.

Balarat Pit Marker

Balarat Pit Marker

We made 7 adjustable metal/plank brackets to support a wall that leaned outwards by nearly 40 degrees. They had to stay in place until upper sections were removed. There are whole sofa cushions inside supporting the roof!

Balarat is 6 metres long x 2 m high and took 7 tons of clay. We built it at the same time as Ocean Colliery Pit Marker (5m long, 5 tons of clay), seen in the background. There is a lot of drying (timing is everything) so having 2 on the go really maximises the use of your budget; we were able to build and install these both for £40,000. Countless wonderful people were involved and it all took over a year.

The Sirhowy Wyvern built w/ Time Banking Wales,Tredegar.

The Sirhowy Wyvern built w/ Time Banking Wales, Tredegar.

The Sirhowy Wyvern has a tunnel running through it (with art-work inside of children working in coal mines, some done by kids like these awesome girls from the Youth Club). We had one clay support-wall half way along to support the roof and this allowed us to get inside from either end to work.

Gito Nith Bran Memorial detail; the Salmon,oldest and wisest of all the creatures in Celtic Mythology.

Guto Nyth Bran Memorial detail; the Salmon, oldest and wisest of all the creatures in Celtic Mythology.

To add on art-work: spend a lot of time softening the surface, add clay, ensure a good join, add clay to block-out art work, wrap in plastic to allow the water to travel from the soft clay into your hardened wall. Un-wrap when the clay has all reached a similar hardness + complete the art-work.

Calon Lan , Blaengarw

Calon Lan, Blaengarw.

As walls are complete they can be smoothed, carved and art-work added and refined. All the tools are normal sized pottery tools and bits of wood. Plastic wrapping and containers of water placed inside can slow the drying, fans (pointed towards walls, not at the clay) and dehumidifiers can speed it up.

Calon Lan was the first really large build I did with a group and only the 3rd one I had done. Many people worked on this piece, using all sorts of techniques and styles. We had lively discussions about the building methods and art-work and worked it out between us. Especially with these early pieces it was terrifying! With each sculpture I have changed the technique a bit. You will do the same, adapting it to your style and clay.

Wendy Sage's panel on Balarat

Wendy Sage’s panel on Balarat Pit Marker, Blaengarw.

This wall on Balarat was built extra thick in preparation for the remarkable volunteer, Wendy Sage, to carve on this fantastic view of the village taken from archive photographs. Wendy worked on this panel for 6 weeks and did a lot of the other art work on the Blaengarw Sculptures.

Ex-Miner , Jim.

Jim, an ex-miner and excellent painter, gave countless hours to all the Blaengarw Sculptures.

wonderful Volunteer , Sharon.

Sharon started out reluctantly helping with the foliage on Calon Lan and quickly became invaluable, working on all aspects of the Sculpture. Here she’s building the dram on Ocean Colliery Pit Marker.

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We all worked on this difficult panel, taking turns to model or advise. Jim knew the ‘feel’ we were after from his time under-ground.

Ocean Colliery Pit Marker - detail

Ocean Colliery Pit Marker – detail

As soon as the top area is firm enough to handle you need to start dismantling the Sculpture. Cracks will be showing up as the whole thing tries to shrink.

Take photos all around the Sculpture. Enlarge + photocopy.

Start cutting from the top with a normal ‘cheese-wire’. Aim for around 30 cm square; sections that are too large will be hideously heavy, crack and worst, warp in the firing. Try and keep the edges of the sections at 90 degrees to the front surface for yourInstaller’s sake. Lay the sections onto memory foam so they don’t distort/get damaged. Draw on your photocopy  Photo-Map the cut’s shape and record the number. Mark the number on each side of the edges of the section (incase one number gets smudged). These Maps, numbers, a tracing, on plastic, of the outline left on the floor of the foot-print of the sculpture and the Scale model are now your most treasured possessions until the sculpture is installed and loosing them will haunt the many nightmares you will have about the whole process.

Once sections are stiff enough to handle without distorting trim away the excess thickness leaving a good 5 cm minimum. ‘Gouge’ out, using loop-tools (or an electric drill on leather-hard sections) a random pattern of channels in the back of the sections that will reduce the thickness to 2cm at any point, act as a grid of braces to deter warping and give excellent grip to the cement that will hold them all together. It’s got to be said: this is not the fun bit….

Dry slowly using a dehumidifier/memory foam support/regular turning for at least 5 weeks. Fire SLOWLY!!! Bear in mind that many brick-clays contain stones; these must be fired extremely slowly passed 500 degrees C to allow vaporised minerals to escape or your sections will ‘bloat’. Luckily I’ve never had this happen thanks to the kind guidance from the  guys at Coleford Brick and Tile who don’t find bloating a laughing matter even though a bloated brick looks like a rugby ball! Be wary, too, of the low melting point of some brick-clays.

I fired all the sections packed in the kiln on their edges (flat seems to invite cracks/distortion) in my Cromartie 16 cu ft Workhorse Electric Kiln in batches of up to 40 sections. 1 ton of sculpture seems to yield about 50 sections.

Installation needs an imaginative Builder with the patients of a saint who will, non-the-less, come to hate your guts. Lay a strong foundation w/ reinforced concrete, build an internal structure of breeze-blocks/infill/steel bars,’clad’ with the sections of sculpture and point up joints. Installation will generally use half your budget.

You can copy/print this next bit for your installer:


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        Installing a ceramic sculpture with sections.

Sculptures made in brick, using any of the various techniques, is incredibly laborious. But they are more durable than any other material. They are the archaeology of the future. More people can be involved in making them and they can be much more affordable than other  materials. The process of the installation will be more like dry-stone walling than brick laying.

Using the Scale Model:

The scale model was used to build the form in wet clay. Changes will have been made to enhance the form in it’s full scale.

There is an 18% shrinkage from wet to fired with Coleford Brick clay so the scale model will be 18% too small.

Spacing and pointing will also affect the installed size.

So the scale model is only a useful guide during installation.

The Sections:

The sculpture is built as one in soft clay and then cut up.

Once the form is built it under-goes a controlled drying period to the point where it can be cut. Obviously the lower layers are very hard by that time, and the upper layers less so.

Cutting has to be done in such a way that the fragile form does not collapse. That is why the numbers follow the sequence they do and why the cuts are where they are.

Cutting up is very difficult and hard work. At each cut the Map is marked, numbered and the section numbered. Mistakes are easily made. 

The sections are heavy and can be awkward to lift. They are set down on memory foam and then trimmed back as much as possible. A grid of gouges in the back helps to hold the shape during drying/firing. Happily they also provide excellent grip during installation. Every care is taken but inevitably some get damaged. Once the clay has passed a certain point in drying it is best to repair this damage after the firing.

 Each section section is carefully handled/supported/turned during a long, very slow drying period of 6 weeks.

The sections will have been divided over a number of firings. No firing is the same and where the section was in the kiln also creates unique conditions. Because the shrinkage is so high ( 18%) and the Coleford Brick clay is being fired to a temperature close to it’s melting point to gain the near vitrification and strength, this may make significant differences to the fired section’s size.

So sections may well have warped, shrunk un-evenly and cracked. They can be trimmed or cut with power tools. Badly warped ones can be cut into several pieces so that they can set well in the form.

Priorities:

The parts that will be focal points and define the sculpture.

                                                      Edges.  Carvings.  Holes.

The hole is focal- people will usually go up close to the holes if they can. But they can be ground with power tools.

Edges can also be ground into line to a certain extent but it is very difficult to re-produce the right texture.

All three are very important but the carvings are the part that needs to be set most carefully.

The Foundation:

The installed sculpture may be solid with infill and very heavy. The foundations need to be adequate. Steel re-bars should be set to re-enforce /anchor the sculpture.

The Layers:

The installation can only progress one layer at a time, starting at the base. If the base layer is angled wrongly that error will magnify with each subsequent layer making it very difficult to look after your 3 priorities ( above).

Careful planning of each layer will make a big difference.

Sections can be trimmed and spacing can be varied. Have a box of spare mosaic tiles/pebbles to decorate very wide gaps. Leave enough gap to point: This sculpture will stand for centuries and all precautions should be taken against water/ice.

         – Using the maps sort the sections into groups.

  • Using a washable paint write the numbers on the out-side of the section.
  • Using a marker-pen write the number of the adjacent section shown on the map, on the inner-edge. Also mark ‘top’, ‘base’ or a this way up arrow.
  • With smaller sculptures or parts like figures:

          Place paper or plastic on ground.

          Starting with the top layer, place the sections using stones/bricks/breeze blocks to support them. Make wedges/spacers and hold in place             w/ duct tape.

          where necessary fix sections together with quick drying cement ( this can be knocked off later.)

          Photograph/measure/make notes.

          Trace the ‘foot-print’ onto the paper. Cut it out and use to guide the next layer down.

         -With large/wide sculptures:

          Set the base layer. Support/space well as above. Hold the next layer sections to each join to check the consequent angles. Lay that next                 layer on the ground around the installed layer and check as much as is necessary that the fit is good.

  • Once you are sure they are correctly placed, fix them in with cement. When that is set put in your next layer of re-bars and infill.

Pointing:

Coleford brick clay is very dense and has extremely low porosity. Ensure your pointing material is suitable to the ceramic.

Red sand gives a good, long lasting match to terracotta colours.

Coloured mortar from Tarmac (http://www.tarmac.com/mortar/mortar/coloured-mortar/  ) are good.

Colour dyes do not last well in sun-light.


The Sirhowy Wyvern, Sirhowy Green, Tredegar, South Wales

The Sirhowy Wyvern, Sirhowy Green, Tredegar, South Wales

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The whole process is spectacularly laborious!! And exquisitely low-tech. There is a job there for every Volunteer of every ability, from teen-age lads building the structure to Grans, kids and every-one in between doing art-work, people who like to stay clean doing research and collecting reference material, the local Cafe feeding you all the vast amounts of cooked dinners it will take to fuel the gruelling lifting and shifting required, people stepping in off the street to give you an invaluable ‘fresh eye’ on how it looks. The finished Sculptures will last for many generations, become landmarks and the pride of the area and finally the archaeology of the future.