Showing posts with label sculpture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sculpture. Show all posts

November 29, 2023

Brigadier General Casimir Pulaski Statue



Earlier this year, the family made a trip to Washington DC. I was hyper-focused on Tootsers sculpting at the time. We walked past this sculpture and I was immediately captured by the artist's rendering of the legs (as you can tell by my selected photography!). I googled it afterward and learned that it is the

Brigadier General Casimir Pulaski Statue


According to Wikipedia, it is a bronze equestrian statue, by Kazimierz Chodziński. It is located at Freedom Plaza, 13th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, Northwest, Washington, D.C. It shows a mounted figure of General Casimir Pulaski. It was authorized on February 27, 1903, and dedicated on May 11, 1910. While it doesn't replace the study of live horses, I think you can learn a lot by studying the work of other artists.











June 10, 2022

BreyerFest Best Customs Contest 2022

 

Giuseppe, the donkey nanny
BF Best Customs Contest Entry 2022


The making of Giuseppe (and a dozen friends)...


Started out by chopping apart a Breyer QH Yearling. 


Whittled it down to almost sticks. I had to remove so much plastic to get the chunky QH into a donkey's thinner frame. By chopping down the middle, I was able to make him narrower. By chopping in half the other way, I was able to lengthen the back and change the angle that the hindquarters attach to the body. 


Sculpted the head separate from the body and found I really liked that approach.


Bulking up and setting the head in place. 



Used painters tape and soda glue to make the armature for the mane and tail tuft. 
Very little of the original plastic shows through and none of the original sculpture is left.
It's all been carved or sanded down.


Took pictures at this stage, so I could see if there were areas needing taking. 


Droopy lip and floppy ears.


Pile of sheep. Lots of back and forth on sculpting these.
These are all original sculptures built from wire armatures. 


Countless hours later, the sheep have made it into primer. 
(insert counting sheep joke here, I have no energy left)


The lambs are also all original sculptures. Here they are trying out the fit of their blanket.


And trying it on G.


Broke out the power tools (love me my power tools) and cut a piece of wood down to size. 
Primed it, painted it with latex paint, then painted it with acrylic craft paints (seen here).
The landscaping came later, sorry no pictures. I worked long and late down to the wire!

G with Sheep
the official ruler picture


Offside showing off the other little lambies.


 I made everything except the string cinch.
The halter was my International Tack Month project,
which I both started and completed about a month or two after IMTM. 
The group was super helpful to point me in the right direction so that I could learn
to skive leather, stitch mark it, and make a rolled throatlatch. 


None of the sheep or lambs have names yet. I am open to suggestions!







January 18, 2020

A quick trip to England

With the family at Stonehenge, which is surrounded by fields of sheep
 Our family had an opportunity to make a quick trip to England in early December 
and it was fabulous! We fit a lot into one week. Here are some of the highlights. 

Oxford University

Cupid in London

Buckingham Palace

I captured this sculpture from the tour bus in London. I find it very intriguing!

Sculpture in the museum at the Tower of London

I am a HUGE Jane Austen fan. We didn't have much time in Bath, so made a beeline
through the Bath Christmas Market straight to the Jane Austen Center. We grabbed a bite and
did some shopping in the Market on our way back to the the tour bus.

London Bridge

July 3, 2018

New Britain Museum of Art

Clydesdale Stallion
Circa 1930
Bronze
John Held, Jr. (1889-1958)
 The New Britain Museum of American Art is a local art museum, which I've attended on a few occasions. Twice to celebrate my daughter's artwork being exhibited as part of the school's presentations and once for a friend's wedding. There is a wide variety of American art on display, but two of my favorite pieces are this bronze Clydesdale sculpture and the following oil painting. I love how the mass of a draft horse still manages to look agile in the pose chosen by the artist.

Detail of Clydesdale Stallion

Le Jour du Grand Prix
(On the Day of the Grand Prix)
1887
Oil on Canvas
Frederick Childe Hassam (1859-1935)
There is a lot to love about this painting, but what drew me to it is the horse in the front. It really appears to be a perlino or some sort of double dilute. Given that this was painted in 1887, I find it fascinating to find this color presented. From a composition stand-point, I appreciate the light color to help the eye move through the painting, but I would have assumed it to be a faded grey. However on closer inspection, I do think it's a perlino!

Detail of Le Jour du Grand Prix

June 26, 2018

Yale University Art Gallery

Detail of A Lion Attacking a Horse


We visited the Yale University Art Gallery in New Haven, CT over spring break and I was blown away! The diversity and quality of the permanent collection is impressive. I particularly enjoyed seeing the Stubbs painting and Remington bronze in person. Here is a selection of many of the equines I spotted on our visit. If you get the chance to visit, I highly recommend it. The architecture of the building itself is worth making the trip!

A Lion Attacking a Horse
George Stubbs, British (1724 - 1806)
1770
Oil on Canvas

Mule Wearing a Bridle
Greek, 3rd - 2nd century B.C.
Bronze

Standing Horse & Horse
Greek, 9th - 8th century B.C.
Bronze

Rearing Horse
Greek, Southern Italian, probably Conasa
4th - 3rd century B.C.
Terracotta with pigment added


Saint GeorgeCircle of Angelos (Akotantos)
Cretan, first half of 15th century
circa 1440
Tempera on wood

Horseman and His Horse at a River
Karel du Jardin, Dutch (1626 - 1678)
1660
Oil on Canvas

Spring Landscape with Donkeys and Goats (The Rabbit-Warren)
Paulus Potter, Dutch (1625 - 1654)
1647
Oil on panel

Detail from Spring Landscape with Donkey and Goats

Detail of The Great Bridge

The Great Bridge
Gustave Courbet, French (1819 - 1877)
1864
Oil on Canvas

Edgar Degas collection

The False Start
Edgar Degas, French (1834 - 1917)
circa 1869-72
Oil on panel

Landscape with an Elegant Hunting Party on a Stag Hunt
Nicolaes Berchem, Dutch (1620 - 1683)
1655-70
Oil on panel

Detail of Landscape with an Elegant Hunting Party on a Stag Hunt

The Stag Hunt
Philips Wouwerman, Dutch (1619 - 1668)
1659-60
Oil on copper

Detail of the Stag Hunt

Horse
China, Tang Dynasty (618 - 907 C.E.)
early 8th century C.E.
Earthenware with three-color (sancai) glaze

Tang Dynasty Chinese collection

The Wounded Bunkie
Frederic Remington, American (1861 - 1909)
1896
Bronze

Detail of The Wounded Bunkie

Detail of The Wounded Bunkie