Prairie Post (East Edition)

Art Gallery of Swift Current innovates with hosting of bronze casting class

- By Matthew Liebenberg mliebenber­g@prairiepos­t.com

A new fine art course in Swift Current provided a unique hands-on opportunit­y for participan­ts to learn more about bronze casting.

The Art Gallery of Swift Current (AGSC) hosted the class for the first time during 2020 and due to the significan­t level of interest it is planning to present it again.

The course instructor­s were AGSC Curator Heather Benning and Phillip Tremblay of Julienne Atelier foundry in Pense.

“I have a list of people from across Saskatchew­an who would like to take this class,” Benning said. “Phil and I enjoy working together, and so we’re talking about doing different types of workshops where it will be accessible to our local community and then people who want to travel from away to come and take the class.”

Each participan­t in the bronze casting class created a bronze sculpture from concept to completion. She noted the AGSC actually offered the only bronze class then available in the province.

“It’s unique for Swift Current, because there’s not a lot of bronze casting done in Saskatchew­an in general,” she said.

The AGSC is able to offer this class, because it is using a section of the Dickson Community Centre (the former St. Patrick Elementary School) as studio space for art classes and workshops.

“We’re really lucky that we have classrooms in the Dickson Community Centre and that we can offer classes like this,” she said. “A lot of smaller community galleries of our size will have classroom spaces, but not quite as much as what we have here, and it’s fantastic that we have the space to be able to bring in these types of workshops.”

The bronze casting class was originally scheduled to take place on Saturdays over a two-month period from May to March 2020, but it was interrupte­d by the COVID-19 pandemic, when the AGSC was closed to the public from mid-March to mid-August.

“We did literally two classes and then the shutdown happened,” she recalled. “So a lot of the students got to take home their oil clay and then work on it throughout the lockdown and that whole isolation period. … Then once the gallery got running again and everything started coming back to existence, we decided to redo the class and get it going again.”

There were nine students in this bronze casting class that started again in October. They learned about oil clay modelling, silicone mould-making with acrylic hard-shell mother mould, lost-wax casting using ceramic shell, bronze pouring, patinas, and resin casting.

“It’s much more involved than a regular sculpting class, and that’s because we’re making the original sculpture out of an oil-based clay that doesn’t dry,” Benning said. “Then we make a silicon mould and then a puzzle piece mother mould that goes over top of it. So even just the mould making is more advanced that what will happen in many sculpting classes.”

There are a few more steps that must be completed before each bronze sculpture is completed at the foundry.

“A wax will be made of the original sculpture that was made inside that mould, and then after that process is done another mould is made, which is called a ceramic shell mould,” she explained. “That happens at the foundry, and then from there the wax gets burned out of the ceramic shell mould and the bronze gets poured in. So it’s a very full-on, developed process that we have to follow and we have to start with a quality sculpture and then the next, most important part is really good quality moulds.”

The completion of the bronze sculptures during a visit to the Julienne Atelier foundry, which is one of Canada’s premier foundries, is another unique aspect of the class. Students were originally going to visit the foundry as a group, but due to COVID-19 restrictio­ns it was changed to individual appointmen­ts.

The foundry was started in 1985 by renowned Saskatchew­an artist and sculptor Joe Fafard, who passed away in 2019. It is now managed by Tremblay, who is a nephew of Fafard.

In addition to creating Fafard’s sculptures during his artistic career, the foundry has been casting bronze sculptures for notable artists such as Victor Cicansky, Dempsey Bob, Michael Hosaluk and Peter Von Tiesenhaus­en. Tremblay is proud of the quality of the work done at this foundry in Saskatchew­an.

 ??  ?? Joan Ortman works on a piece of her disassembl­ed sculpture during the mouldmakin­g process. Fellow class participan­t Keely Williams is standing behind her.
Joan Ortman works on a piece of her disassembl­ed sculpture during the mouldmakin­g process. Fellow class participan­t Keely Williams is standing behind her.
 ??  ?? Photos by Matthew Liebenberg/Prairie Post Bronze class participan­t Sylvia Thompson prepares a disassembl­ed piece of her sculpture for the foundry process.
Photos by Matthew Liebenberg/Prairie Post Bronze class participan­t Sylvia Thompson prepares a disassembl­ed piece of her sculpture for the foundry process.
 ??  ?? Bronze class participan­ts work in the Art Gallery of Swift Current studio space at the Dickson Community Centre.
Bronze class participan­ts work in the Art Gallery of Swift Current studio space at the Dickson Community Centre.

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