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Making The Cosmic Void Light Sculpture

October 5, 2014 Jason Hite
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This piece represents the culmination of a lot of things happening in my life.  Technically, it was an extremely challenging sculpture that took me a little longer than I anticipated. The mold alone was a real head scratchier. I thought about it for weeks and I didn't quite figure it out until I was making it! All of the light sculptures I created before this one had to be rigged with lights, after creation. With this piece, I actually sculpted in the brackets behind it to fit a specific lighting set, meaning I can make multiples with considerably less light fabrication time. The piece started out very different. As I progressed it slowly changed, but the initial block out process was quick and a lot of fun.

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At one point I wanted to make little pods for miniature people I sculpted a while back. I later changed my mind.

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Below is a shot of the finished clay sculpture. Can you find the chicken bones?

Finished Clay

After the front half of the sculpture was molded, I pulled out the original clay and created a quarter inch thickness of clay inside it to create a the back of the piece. This is where things started to get tricky. The pour spout was a brain teaser, but I deiced that it needed to be at the bottom of the piece. This allows it to be filled from a vertical position, bottom to top without making as many bubbles. You can also see my vents at the top of the piece. These allow the air to escape as the resin flows inside.

Back clay

Here is a shot of the finished mold.

Mold open

I used a skull underneath the central face and allowed enough space for it to fit inside of the mold. This allowed me to insert the skull inside before I cast the finished piece.

A Little Head inside

Finally, it would not have been possible to make this the way I did without my new investment; a 10 gallon Pressure Pot tank. This tank greatly helps to eliminate air bubbles, ESPECIALLY FOR CASTING TRANSLUCENT MATERIAL. The mold fits SNUGLY into that tank. If it were any larger,this would not have worked. Below is a shot of the mold in the pressure pot. Tight fit!

Pressure Pot Mold

The first casting is born!! Check out how you can see the teeth from the skull underneath the translucent resin!

First Casting

Painting this sucker is a whole lot of fun! BUT before that, I attached my LED light strips to the inside of the piece. As I mentioned before, I sculpted in special brackets on the inside of the piece to hold some light strips I purchased. Below, it is all lit up without paint. The red bits are supposed to be veins I made using pieces of bright red yearn and 5 min epoxy glue. It wasn't quite what I was going for but it adds depth.

All lit up

My first paint attempt turned out pretty good. I used DEKA stained glass paints that have to be special ordered from overseas. If you ever happen to get you hands on some, USE A RESPIRATOR MASK, that stuff stinks! Anyway, the goal here is to give it that glow from within look without blowing out all of the detail. It's quite tricky to achieve and I'm looking forward to painting a few more. Below are some shots with the lights on and lights off. The appearance also changes greatly due to the mount of surface light you have on the piece. The images below have a lot of surface light. This piece will be on display and for sale at Crated At The Port of Los Angeles in association with the HP Love Craft Film-Festival and Cuthluhu Con 2014 until the end of October.

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This green version below is for the Auguste Clown Gallery in Australia, my first international show! I call this one "Incorporeal." They are doing a Halloween group show and I am so proud to have been invited to participate.

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I wasn't sure if my plug in lights would work in Australia, due to their sockets being different, so this one glows in the dark! Here are shots of what it looks like in darkness with a black light charge.

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This last one pictured below is still a WIP for a show at the Copro Gallery October 18th -November 8th. I'm going red, and in this stage all I seem to think about is red gummy bears! Wish me luck!

Gummy Art

 

 

 

In Blog, Featured, Sculptures, Slideshow
1 Comment

Behind the Veil

January 6, 2014 Jason Hite
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Conjoined IV I'm super excited about the upcoming CONJOINED IV show! Im honored to have Chet Zar and the Copro Gallery using my sculpture "Behind The Veil" for promoting the show. This prompted me in having the piece created in chrome plated BRONZE by Grant Standard at Black Hills Bronze! I met Grant at Conjoined II back in 2012 and have been itching to do something in metal with him and his talented crew.  This is my very first sculpture to be made in bronze and I can't wait to see it on the wall at the show. Below are a few shots of the bronze process.

After completing, my sculpture called "Bliss" in Monster Makers Clay, I striped down the clay to reveal the skull I placed in at the start of this project. Doing this, insured that I would have the correct registration and depth for when I merge these two pieces into one. This will be done in the near future so stay tuned!

Half and Half

Above is the destruction of 'Bliss" and the beginning of "Behind the Veil".

Sculpting the Veil

Here I am putting the finishing touches on the sculpt, it took quite a bit of time to get everything just right and if I look too close at it I'm still not 100% happy...maybe 90%?

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This is a shot of the outer fiberglass jacket created to hold the silicone in place.

Mold

Here is a pristine shot of the inside of the mold when it arrived at Black Hills bronze in north Dakota and below are images of the wax process for bronze.

Wax Pour

I love this shot of the in-process wax coating of the mold taken by Grant Standard, it looks so surreal. We are looking and a concave image by our minds automatically invert it so that it looks convex!

Wax

The wax is born from my silicone mold, to create an investment mold for metal.

Ceramic Shell

This is the ceramic shell in process over the wax. I believe this is the first layer of the investment mold. Note the spews at the bottom of the piece. Those will serve as air vents and the pouring spout.

Investment mold

Here is the completed investment mold.  Once the wax is burned out of the mold it is ready for the HOT METAL to be poured!!!!

The Pour

I love my friend Mike Biasi's comment he made on this image, " Oh the joys of standing in front of a burnout kiln near the crucible while wearing heavy protective gear. Even if its cold outside, those guys are roasting..."

Hot Mold

 

Red Hot MOLD!

Pieces of the shell

It's strange to see these broken mold pieces and know exactly what parts of the sculpture they came from.

First Look at Metal

Here is a first look at the metal after Grant and his crew cleaned it up a bit. She is a true beauty!

Chromed

And finally here she is back from chrome plating!! WOW! I cant wait to see this in person. So Excited!!!

Finished piece

DONE! I'm so pleased to have had Grant Standard and his crew do this for me. They did an AMAZING job and I cannot thank them enough. I'm already planing out my next metal piece for next year!

In Blog, Exhibitions, Sculptures, Slideshow
3 Comments

Proteath the Lord of Changes

April 26, 2013 Jason Hite
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Proteath Concept Sketch An insane 4 feet tall bust Collaboration with mentor, Clive Barker

Proteath Sculpture

Proteath Sculpture

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Proteath Sculpture Back

In Sculptures
2 Comments

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