Although a sculptor may specialize in, say, stone carving or direct metalwork, the art of sculpture is not identifiable with any particular craft or set of crafts. It presses into its service whatever crafts suit its purposes. Technologies developed for more utilitarian purposes are often easily adapted for sculpture; in fact, useful artifacts and sculptured images have often been produced in the same workshop, sometimes by the same craftsman. The methods and techniques employed in producing a pot, a bronze harness trapping, a decorative stone molding or column, a carved wooden newel post, or even a fibreglass car body are essentially the same as those used in sculpture. For example, the techniques of repoussé, metal casting, blacksmithing, sheet-metal work, and welding, which are used for the production of functional artifacts and decorative metalwork, are also used in metal sculpture; and the preparation, forming, glazing, decoration, and firing of clay are basically the same in both utilitarian pottery and pottery sculpture. The new techniques used by sculptors today are closely related to new techniques applied in building and industrial manufacture. The sculptor as designer and as craftsman
The conception of an artifact or a work of art—its form, imaginative content, and expressiveness—is the concern of a designer, and it should be distinguished from the execution of the work in a particular technique and material, which is the task of a craftsman. A sculptor often functions as both designer and craftsman, but these two aspects of sculpture may be separated.
Certain types of sculpture depend considerably for their aesthetic effect on the way in which their material has been directly manipulated by the artist himself. The direct, expressive handling of clay in a model by Rodin, or the use of the chisel in the stiacciato (very low) reliefs of the 15th-century Florentine sculptor Donatello could no more have been delegated to a craftsman than could the brushwork of Rembrandt. The actual physical process of working materials is for many sculptors an integral part of the art of sculpture, and their response to the working qualities of the material—such as its plasticity, hardness, and texture—is evident in the finished work. Design and craftsmanship are intimately fused in such a work, which is a highly personal expression.
Even when the direct handling of material is not as vital as this to the expressiveness of the work, it still may be impossible to separate the roles of the artist as designer and craftsman. The qualities and interrelationships of forms may be so subtle and complex that they cannot be adequately specified and communicated to a craftsman. Moreover, many aspects of the design may actually be contributed during the process of working. Michelangelo’s way of working, for example, enabled him to change his mind about important aspects of composition as the work proceeded.
A complete fusion of design and craftsmanship may not be possible if a project is a large one or if the sculptor is too old or too weak to do all of the work himself. The sheer physical labour of making a large sculpture can be considerable, and sculptors from Phidias in the 5th century bce to Henry Moore in the 20th century, for example, have employed pupils and assistants to help with it. Usually the sculptor delegates the time-consuming first stages of the work or some of its less important parts to his assistants and executes the final stages or the most important parts himself.
On occasion, a sculptor may function like an architect or industrial designer. He may do no direct work at all on the finished sculpture, his contribution being to supply exhaustive specifications in the form of drawings and perhaps scale models for a work that is to be entirely fabricated by craftsmen. Obviously, such a procedure excludes the possibility of direct, personal expression through the handling of the materials; thus, works of this kind usually have the same anonymous, impersonal quality as architecture and industrial design. An impersonal approach to sculpture was favoured by many sculptors of the 1960s such as William Tucker, Donald Judd, and William Turnbull. They used the skilled anonymous workmanship of industrial fabrications to make their large-scale, extremely precise, simple sculptural forms that are called “primary structures.” General methods
Broadly speaking, the stages in the production of a major work of sculpture conform to the following pattern: the commission; the preparation, submission, and acceptance of the design; the selection and preparation of materials; the forming of materials; surface finishing; installation or presentation.
Almost all of the sculpture of the past and some present-day sculpture originates in a demand made upon the sculptor from outside, usually in the form of a direct commission or through a competition. If the commission is for a portrait or a private sculpture, the client may only require to see examples of the artist’s previous work; but if it is a public commission, the sculptor is usually expected to submit drawings and maquettes (small-scale, three-dimensional sketch models) that give an idea of the nature of the finished work and its relation to the site. He may be free to choose his own subject matter or theme, or it may be more or less strictly prescribed. A medieval master sculptor, for example, received the program for a complex scheme of church sculpture from theological advisers, and Renaissance contracts for sculpture were often extremely specified and detailed. Today a great deal of sculpture is not commissioned. It arises out of the sculptor’s private concern with form and imagery, and he works primarily to satisfy himself. When the work is finished he may exhibit and attempt to sell it in an art gallery.
Most of the materials used by 20th-century sculptors were readily available in a usable form from builders’ or sculptors’ suppliers, but certain kinds of sculpture may involve a good deal of preparatory work on the materials. A sculptor may visit a stone quarry in order to select the material for a large project and to have it cut into blocks of the right size and shape. And since stone is costly to transport and best carved when freshly quarried, he may decide to do all of his work at the quarry. Because stone is extremely heavy, the sculptor must have the special equipment required for maneuvering even small blocks into position for carving. A wood-carver requires a supply of well-seasoned timber and may keep a quantity of logs and blocks in store. A modeler needs a good supply of clay of the right kind. For large terra-cottas he may require a specially made-up clay body, or he may work at a brickworks, using the local clay and firing in the brick kilns.
The main part of the sculptor’s work, the shaping of the material itself by modeling, carving, or constructional techniques, may be a long and arduous process, perhaps extending over a number of years and requiring assistants. Much of the work, especially architectural decoration, may be carried out at the site, or in situ.
To improve its weathering qualities, to bring out the characteristics of its material to the best advantage, or to make it more decorative or realistic, sculpture is usually given a special surface finish. It may be rubbed down and polished, patinated, metal plated, gilded, painted, inlaid with other materials, and so on.
Finally, the installation of sculpture may be a complex and important part of the work. The positioning and fixing of large architectural sculpture may involve cooperation with builders and engineers; fountains may involve elaborate plumbing; the design and placing of outdoor bases, or plinths, in relation to the site and the spectator may require careful thought. The choice of the materials, shape, and proportions of the base even for a small work requires a considerable amount of care. Carving
Whatever material is used, the essential features of the direct method of carving are the same; the sculptor starts with a solid mass of material and reduces it systematically to the desired form. After he has blocked out the main masses and planes that define the outer limits of the forms, he works progressively over the whole sculpture, first carving the larger containing forms and planes and then the smaller ones until eventually the surface details are reached. Then he gives the surface whatever finish is required. Even with a preliminary model as a guide, the sculptor’s concept constantly evolves and clarifies as the work proceeds; thus, as he adapts his design to the nature of the carving process and the material, his work develops as an organic whole.