A tutorial of how Tony makes one of his sculptures

This is the Chavant clay. It doesn't have sulphur in it so it won't
impede the silicone when I go to mold the bust. I prefer this for
personal projects as it smooths with mineral spirits. But Super Sculpey
is much better for professional work because it bakes. You can sand it
smooth easier, and you can ship it. This stuff is hard to ship. It never
cures because it's oil based.

My favorite tools. All of my work was done using these 4 tools and very
little else. They do it all. A rake, a spatula, a large loop and a tiny
loop. That's all you really need.

This is the epoxy resin I use to secure my armature. It's two parts,
and you mix them equally. In a few hours, it is rock hard. Or you an
speed up the process with heat.

My trusty alcohol torch. Best five bucks I ever spent. It's used to
smooth/heat hard wax & clay, and also to heat tools for working with
wax and hard oil clays. You just fill it with denatured Alcohol, light
the wick, and squeeze gently. It emits a long flame, like a tiny blow
torch. By gently passing it by the surface of the clay, it smooths and
melts it subtly, leaving the surface warm so you can re-work the hard
clay or add texture, etc.
This is an incredibly useful page from the MAD style guide, specifically used to guide 3D art of Alfred.

I
pin up my reference material. The page on the board to the left is a
PERFECT 3D statue of Alfred done by my pal, mentor and incredible
sculptor, Kent Melton. The MAD issues from the 70's were mine when I was
a kid. I rescued them from my mother's attic before the squirrels got
them.
This is
the armature. Talk about high tech, huh? It's a length of 1/4 inch
aluminum wire secured to a board and a blob of epoxy putty on top. Takes
about 2 minutes to make and you are ready for clay!!! ( after epoxy is
hard, of course.) With this kind of armature, as opposed to a pipe, I
can pose/tilt the head a little. after I begin to put the clay on

The clay in a baking pan, fresh out of the oven. I use low heat in the
oven, even a heat lamp will do. Believe me, when this clay is cool, it
will be rock hard. I work fast, trying not to burn my hands---and then I
pop the tray back into the oven for a few minutes or use a heat gun to
warm it up faster, scraping long shards off at a time.
I block out skull and shoulders. I can still reposition the head if I want.

No tools used yet, just my thumbs. I work fast to block out the forms, not worrying about any details at this stage.

I take a pointy tool and scribe in lines to guide me, allowing me to
easily see where the details and the planes are. Head has a slight tilt
to the viewer right and I twisted the neck to look to his right.

Using rake to blend clay and to define planes of head.
I scoop out eye sockets, begin to add hair, more raking. I constantly turn the bust and step back away from table.
All of the basic proportions and pertinent information are in place. Now it's noodle time!
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