Casting and molding
- Key People:
- Mickalene Thomas
- Gego
- Ed Dwight
- Filippo Caffieri
- Chris Ofili
- Related Topics:
- Western sculpture
- relief
- figurehead
- wax sculpture
- lamassu
- Notable Honorees:
- François Boucher
- On the Web:
- Victoria and Albert Museum - Sculpture techniques (Oct. 28, 2024)
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These are used for producing a single cast from a soft, plastic original, usually clay. They are especially useful for producing master casts for subsequent reproduction in metal. The basic procedure is as follows. First, the mold is built up in liquid plaster over the original clay model; for casting reliefs, a one-piece mold may be sufficient, but for sculpture in the round a mold in at least two sections is required. Second, when the plaster is set, the mold is divided and removed from the clay model. Third, the mold is cleaned, reassembled, and filled with a self-setting material such as plaster, concrete, or fibreglass-reinforced resin. Fourth, the mold is carefully chipped away from the cast. This involves the destruction of the mold—hence the term “waste” mold. The order of reassembling and filling the mold may be reversed; fibreglass and resin, for example, are “laid up” in the mold pieces before they are reassembled.
Plaster piece molds are used for producing more than one cast from a soft or rigid original and are especially good for reproducing existing sculpture and for slip casting (see below). Before the invention of flexible molds (see below), piece molds were used for producing wax casts for metal casting by the lost-wax process. A piece mold is built up in sections that can be withdrawn from the original model without damaging it. The number of sections depends on the complexity of the form and on the amount of undercutting; tens, or even hundreds, of pieces may be required for really large, complex works. The mold sections are carefully keyed together and supported by a plaster case. When the mold has been filled, it can be removed section by section from the cast and used again. Piece molding is a highly skilled and laborious process.
Made of such materials as gelatin, vinyl, and rubber, flexible molds are used for producing more than one cast; they offer a much simpler alternative to piece molding when the original model is a rigid one with complex forms and undercuts. The material is melted and poured around the original positive in sections, if necessary. Being flexible, the mold easily pulls away from a rigid surface without causing damage. While it is being filled (with wax, plaster, concrete, and fibreglass-reinforced resins), the mold must be surrounded by a plaster case to prevent distortion.
The lost-wax process is the traditional method of casting metal sculpture. It requires a positive, which consists of a core made of a refractory material and an outer layer of wax. The positive can be produced either by direct modeling in wax over a prepared core, in which case the process is known as direct lost-wax casting, or by casting in a piece mold or flexible mold taken from a master cast. The wax positive is invested with a mold made of refractory materials and is then heated to a temperature that will drive off all moisture and melt out all the wax, leaving a narrow cavity between the core and the investment. Molten metal is then poured into this cavity. When the metal has cooled down and solidified, the investment is broken away, and the core is removed from inside the cast. The process is, of course, much more complex than this simple outline suggests. Care has to be taken to suspend the core within the mold by means of metal pins, and a structure of channels must be made in the mold that will enable the metal to reach all parts of the cavity and permit the mold gases to escape. A considerable amount of filing and chasing of the cast is usually required after casting is completed.
While the lost-wax process is used for producing complex, refined metal castings, sand molding is more suitable for simpler types of form and for sculpture in which a certain roughness of surface does not matter. Recent improvements in the quality of sand castings and the invention of the “lost-pattern” process (see below) have resulted in a much wider use of sand casting as a means of producing sculpture. A sand mold, made of special sand held together by a binder, is built up around a rigid positive, usually in a number of sections held together in metal boxes. For a hollow casting, a core is required that will fit inside the negative mold, leaving a narrow cavity as in the lost-wax process. The molten metal is poured into this cavity.
The lost-pattern process is used for the production by sand molding of single casts in metal. After a positive made of expanded polystyrene is firmly embedded in casting sand, molten metal is poured into the mold straight onto the expanded foam original. The heat of the metal causes the foam to pass off into vapour and disappear, leaving a negative mold to be filled by the metal. Channels for the metal to run in and for the gases to escape are made in the mold, as in the lost-wax process. The method is used mainly for producing solid castings in aluminum that can be welded or riveted together to make the finished sculpture.
Slip casting is primarily a potter’s technique that can be used for repetition casting of small pottery sculptures. Liquid clay, or slip, is poured into a plaster piece mold. Some of the water in the slip is absorbed by the plaster and a layer of stiffened clay collects on the surface of the mold. When this layer is thick enough to form a cast, the excess slip is poured off and the mold is removed. The hollow clay cast is then dried and fired.
Simple casts for pottery sculpture—mainly tiles and low reliefs—can be prepared by pressing clay into a rigid mold. More complex forms can be built up from a number of separately press-cast pieces. Simple terra-cotta molds can be made by pressing clay around a rigid positive form. After firing, these press molds can be used for press casting.