creative research gallery and drawing center
a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization

 

DRAWING CENTER STUDIO



SUMMER 2010
CAST DRAWING WORKSHOP
August 9 - 13



Belvedere Torso, 1st century B.C.


WHY CAST DRAWING?

It is generally assumed that artists don’t copy, they create. However, every practicing artist knows the value of following in the footsteps of a master who has charted the course, learning from their decisions and moves. The “master copy” is a foundational discipline for this approach – literally replicating the work of another artist, usually a painting or drawing, attempting to duplicate their creation. However, many artists find value in taking it another step – or, better put, another dimension. “Cast drawing” is the practice of rendering a 3-dimensional sculpture or plaster cast from observation. This added dimension strengthens the spatial sensitivity of the artist as she strives to take in the visual knowledge passed down by the original sculptor. Juliette Aristides calls the practice of cast sculpture drawing as “a silent dialog with the master.”

However, while cast drawing may be a “quiet” practice, it is not passive. Unlike the 2-dimensional paintings or drawings used for traditional master copies, plaster casts “move.” Or rather, we move, thus changing our perception and therefore our subject. Lighting conditions are key in cast drawing, and even the slightest change can result in a disruption of the visual reference. The plaster white surface of the form helps to develop the artist’s sensitivity to subtle value shifts on a surface. All of this adds up to a rigorous practice that is so much more than mere “copying.” Cast drawing is about an activated and alert engagement with a three-dimensional form, heightening our awareness and sharpening our skills. In this way, cast drawing serves as a natural step toward life drawing.

To “copy” a master painting or cast sculpture is more than an imitation of a singular work of art. Through this practice, the artist is also “copying the copiers.” In drawing a cast sculpture, the artist follows in the footsteps of Michelangelo, Jacques-Louis David, Peter Rubens, Edgar Degas, and countless other masters who spent years studying and imitating the great works of the past. To stand before a classical cast bust, to translate that bust to paper… is to enter the wide current that flows from art’s rich history to the present.




See more examples of contemporary Cast Drawing here.

Register for Manifest's CAST DRAWING WORKSHOP here.

 

 



Rubens - Drawing of Belvedere Torso




Michelangelo - Influenced by studying the Belvedere Torso




Shane Wolf - Contemporary Cast Drawing

 

 

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Manifest is supported by sustainability funding from the Ohio Arts Council, and through the generous direct contributions of hundreds of individual supporters and private foundations who care deeply about Manifest's mission for the visual arts.


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2727 woodburn avenue
cincinnati, ohio 45206


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cincinnati, ohio 45223


   

 


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