The Importance of Space (aka my excuse for not sculpting this week)

11/11/07

Permalink 04:25:57 pm, by isculpt Email , 753 words, 163 views   English (US)
Categories: General

The Importance of Space (aka my excuse for not sculpting this week)

Well, I've been in Des Moines for close to a week now, and I didn't do any sculpting until yesterday. It's not hard to find excuses - I worked long hours and was tired when I got back to my hotel room each night, but when I'm home, a hard day of work is actually more likely to make me sculpt, and there I have other responsibilities besides work. I think I've figured out why it was so hard for me to sculpt this past week, and that was a lack of space.

Ordinarily when I travel to Des Moines, I stay at the downtown Marriott, which is a fairly standard full-service Marriott, with normal size rooms. As an "elite" member of Marriott Rewards (translation: I travel a lot), I often get upgraded to larger rooms, but even the normal size rooms there have a large desk and a fair amount of space. In fact, I'm typing this from a room in the Des Moines Marriott, right now. I have my computer out, and all my sculpting stuff where I can just sit down and use it, and don't have to worry about shuffling things around But, I just checked in here yesterday. Last week, I was at a different hotel: the Renaissance Savery, which is another Marriott property.

Now, I like the Savery... a lot. It's an old hotel with a lot of character. There's absolutely nothing cookie cutter about it at all, and I don't think I've stayed in two rooms that were exactly the same there. Many of the rooms are extraordinarily large, and prior to this stay, every room I was in was at least as large as an ordinary modern hotel room, and on many occasions I was put into multi-room suites.

This past week, I found the downside of an "old hotel with a lot of character"; there are also some rooms that are ridiculously small, and I got one. I think they would ordinarily hesitate to put an elite guest in a room this small, but to be honest, with all the politicians in towns, I was lucky to get a room at all. I wish I could have gotten a picture of the room - but my camera didn't have a lens that was wide-angle enough. The bed practically touched the wall - I had to climb over the bed to get to my suitcase, and the closet door couldn't even open up all the way, making for a rather amusing scene each morning as I tried to get my hanging clothes out of it. The desk was tiny, and barely fit my laptop computer. It just wasn't practical to set up my sculpting stuff and leave it out, and at the end of the day it just seemed like too much effort to clean off the desk and pull out my sculpting stuff, only to know that when I was done, I would have to put it away again.

Now that I've moved hotels, I've got the luxury of more room and I've been sculpting in a lot of my free time. I'm working in small scale in epoxy putty, which is a medium I've gotten a bit rusty at, but it feels good to be doing something. In my next few posts, I will be posting some pictures of my progress for those who aren't familiar with sculpting in epoxy putty.

Take a lesson from my experience. If you want to sculpt, the best thing you can do for yourself is to find a dedicated space. It doesn't have to be much - even a corner of an unused table or an old door suspended across two sawhorses in the basement (that may sound silly, but my first dedicated space was basically just that). Good lighting is important, as is being comfortable in your spot, but the most important thing is to have the ability to leave stuff if out you want to. I'm not saying that you shouldn't clean up after yourself, but you shouldn't always have to clean up everything if you're in the middle of a sculpt. If you can leave some stuff out, you're far more likely to fit in short sculpting sessions when you have short periods of free time.

Also... and I know a few people disagree with me on this, but I believe for most people it is sound advice: Don't sculpt at your computer, because nothing will distract you from sculpting more than the internet.

Comments, Pingbacks:

Comment from: Noadi [Visitor] Email · http://noadi.blogspot.com
Space is definitely a big deal. Mine is very limited, I only have a corner of the loving room to sculpt but it's all mine and that makes a big difference. For a few months I didn't have a space, I had to sculpt on a little rolling cart with a glass top and it was really hard for me to get anything done.

As for the computer, yeah I disagree, I sculpt at my computer all the time and the internet isn't a big distraction (plus I keep some reference stuff on my computer) a bigger distraction for me is the tv. The internet has no plot ^_^
PermalinkPermalink 11/11/07 @ 18:05
Comment from: isculpt [Member] Email
Oooh, tell me more about this loving room. Sounds fun!

(Just kidding, in case you didn't pick up on that...)

My experience, limited as it is, seems to be that roughly 25% of sculptors can sculpt by their computers with no loss in productivity. Now that's very unscientific - probably +/-75% or so, but it's certainly true for me and more than one person I've talked to. Could be because I don't watch television, but for me, there's a real danger of spending a lot of time writing about sculpting and no time actually sculpting if I try to use the same space for sculpting and using my computer. I also have to deal with the fact that my "day job" involves sitting at the computer for hours on end, so that could definitely be part of it.

Like you, I keep a lot of reference material on my computer, but I try to print out what I'll need for sculpting. The amount of ref material on my computer is just information overload - I could never use it all, but if it take some time to print out poses or physiques I like, but go sculpt in a completely different space, I find I'm much more productive. I've had this idea of creating a searchable database of poses, searchable by every possible physical trait, but it's one of those things that's an awful lot of work, and even though it sounds cool, I'm not sure I could ever recoup the up front time expenditure to create such a database, and due to copyright laws etc. wouldn't be able to share the fruits of my labor.

The cool thing about sculpting is that there is no One Right Way™. We all find what works for us, and we share freely of things that work for us when people ask. If we're smart, though, we don't try to enforce our way on others (your mermaid, for example (which rocks), would have been seriously diminished had you followed any of my advice). Oh, we readily share information if asked, and help those who are just starting - sculptors are among the most generous people I've ever met when it comes to their time, but for the most part, we don't get sucked into stupid holy wars about shit that doesn't matter. Is Wax, or Sculpey, or Plastilene, or Castilene, or whatever the best? Yes. Or No. The material simply doesn't matter and the technique doesn't matter, as long a the final result is good. It might matter to the specific sculptor, but in the scheme of things, it's trivial.
PermalinkPermalink 11/11/07 @ 20:30

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