At The Foundry

The casting of John Turner is actually featured on Bridgette Mongeon’s main website. Check out
Preparing to Sculpt
Making a Mold
The Wax
Casting and Metal
Delivery and Installation

Also: This is a sculpture created of John Turner for the city of Frisco. The entire project is documented on a project blog at https://johnturnersculpture.blogspot.com/

 What you are seeing here actually happened weeks ago. 

WAXES:  In each rubber mold wax is poured or brushed.  The wax is not solid but it is hollow. The pieces will be cast this way and put together in metal. 

THE DIP: After the foundry makes the waxes they are dipped into a slurry mixture and coated with sand. This makes a ceramic shell both inside and out.  This process is not captured on this blog.

THE POUR: The wax is burned out of the shell and molten bronze is poured into each of the pieces. This process is often referred to as the “lost wax method of bronze casting.”

step by step process of creating a bronze statue

CHASING:
There is still much to do. Each shell must be broken off of the bronze, the metal is then cleaned and each of the pieces will be welded together.

WELDING:
It is a little horrific seeing John and the dog cast about and in pieces.  The weld marks look horrible as well, but the foundry workers are artists and can blend each of the welds seamlessly.  On April 27, I’ll be headed to the foundry to “check the metal.” I’ll go over everything and circles any areas that I feel need attention.

This is a sculpture created of John Turner for the city of Frisco. The entire project is documented on a project blog at https://johnturnersculpture.blogspot.com/

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