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Thread: alphonse mucha panel - wip

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  1. #1

    alphonse mucha panel - wip

    today, i want to show you what i am working at in the moment. it is not a portrait per se, but the main subject is a figure, so i thought you might like to see it.

    this panel will be the side decoration of one of my bookshelfs. it will be 6 foot high, and 1 foot wide, and cover the whole side of the shelf... the depth of the wood is 3/4'', meaning the carving is shallower than a coin, relatively speaking. ... the design is heavily based on a drawing of alphonse mucha, which i love very much....

    the first two images show an overview how the progress is so far, and a closup into the region i carved the last days.

    the last foto shows a clay model for the face. it is 1-1 in size. ... i was not completely satisfied with the model, so, i am reworking it now.

    Last edited by doris fiebig; 02-07-2010 at 1:47 PM.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    Chesterfield, VA
    Posts
    1,332
    you've done a great job there! i like it!

  3. #3
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    New Paris, OH
    Posts
    33

    Facial features

    The facial features of the clay model look realistic. Are they similar in depth to the rest of the carving? The nose and eyes look great or are my eyes tricking me and you are going to carving deeper?

  4. #4
    thank you steve and doug ... yes, the clay face is same depth and size as it would be when carved on wood. i measured it carefully to not exceed the 3/4'' i have available in wood, since i want later copy it, as i feel its difficult to "wing" it, since there is not much wood behind to correct errors... the nose and eyes look so deep, since i really use ALL the depth available, so when i carve this face, there will be areas where the wood is really really thin (about 1mm)... i know this is a little trying the fate, but i feel i want it this way...and afterall its a panle for me, so it need be exciting ...

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    New Paris, OH
    Posts
    33

    Where's the bottom of the wood?

    1 mm thickness - well, that's what you and Mark always say ... Carve until there's no wood left !

    Looking really great and so natural. Flows great.

  6. #6
    yup... it will be a challenge, but the reward is more depth than to expect in such a panel...or an unwanted hole... lol... thanks doug !

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    Lake Isabella, CA
    Posts
    29

    Alphonse Mucha

    I can see why you like the designs of Alphonse Mucha for your relief carvings. Excellent! Also, looks like you had a knot to work around in the wood. Phil

  8. #8
    hi phil, yes this pine has knots. they are a little difficult to carve, but as long as i can manage that they not disturb the design, i really like these knots in pine. and, so far, i just carved them by making pretty short cuts, and this worked well.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Brunswick, Ohio
    Posts
    115

    Long live Art Nouveau !

    I love your project. Please post more pictures as your work progresses. I would like to do something like that in marquetry. I live near Cleveland, Ohio some of our old buildings were built in The Art Nouveau style and still have a lot of their ornamentation. It's sad that the new buildings are so pain. I assume that you made a drawing to fit your project dimensions first. Could we see that too? Keep up the good work.
    tom

  10. #10
    hello tom, i always enjoy meeting other art nouveau lovers :-) ... yes, i made a drawing in small, and then printed it in enlargement to fit exactely on the wood.. here is an image

    if you want see more steps how i came to this point, please visit the corresponding story on my blog here . yes, i will show some updates here too...

  11. #11
    Beautiful, beautiful. I love art nouveau, I love Alphonse Mucha, and I love this. I usually hang around the Neanderthal haven, but the title "Alphonse Mucha" caught my eye--"someone knows Alphonse Mucha?" I thought. All I can say is wow, that is fantastic.

    There was a discussion on a British forum recently about the direction of woodworkers' design, and several people critiqued several woodworking forms and fads (light and dark wood, stark and modernistic Krenov-style furniture), and thought that after the serial revivals in Shaker, Arts & Crafts, etc, that art nouveau was due for a revival. I'm in accord, but suspect that the reason it hasn't happened already is that carving like yours is an art, not a table saw - hammers and nails - project. And art is hard to come by, very dear indeed.

    Please keep us updated on this. I'd love to learn how to do this, what I'd need, and the techinques you use. Roy Underhill had a carver on -- you can still see the episode online -- where she showed how to do acanthus leaves. What a revelation!

  12. #12
    hello jonathan, yes it is the same here, i mean that art nouveau is not so much seen. but i love it since i first saw those beautiful lines and the playfulness...

    it certainly is not saw, hammer and nail project, the main point is the carving...and, sometimes i feel a little helpless since the wood has so few depth for me to play with forms. but then, this is the challenge i love too :-)

    as i said in my previous post, on my blog will be finally the whole "story". it is not a tutorial, but rather me showing how i approach the project. i will show more here too, and please feel free to ask whatever you wish to know and i will try my best to help and give info .

    in the moment, i am working again on the clay model for the face, i was not really happy with the first version, but now its not better...lol...as soon as i get what i want, i can carve it, i am sure, so, the preparation for the face needs more time. and, i believe this is essential, the face needs be right for the whole panel to convince. mucha has drawn so very beautiful women, i want express this, and some more, too... thank you for your reply.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    torrance, Ca
    Posts
    2,072
    Very cool. Diggin it.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Lancaster PA USA
    Posts
    254
    Fantastic , love Mucha and Art Nouveau in general. I need to learn to carve at some point.
    I know the voices in my head aren't real but boy do they come up with some good ideas !
    People discuss my art and pretend to understand as if it were necessary to understand, when it's simply necessary to love. - Claude Monet

  15. #15
    thank you brian ! the best time to start on an idea is just the moment it occurs, so i want encourage you to take up a chisel and start right now ... the first cut is the most difficult, after that you will be hooked and it goes much easier :-) ... and, if you need help, you find lots of info on my blog, and you can ask questions there too, if you like...

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