Photo sculpture
A photo-sculpture is the reproduction of persons, animals, and things, in 3-dimensions by taking a series of photos in the round and using them as synchronized photo projections to create a sculpture.[1] The process was invented and patented by French artist (painter, sculptor and photographer) François Willème in 1860. He took a series of photographs from around a subject and used them to carve a likeness of the figure.[2] Contemporary photo sculptures are obtained through a process of 3D scanning and 3D printing. The results are small statues that represent the portrayed entity.
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Diagram from the U.S. patent application
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Photosculpture of François Willème from the 1860s
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Series of photographs taken in 1865 for photosculpture
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Willème's rotunda laboratory at 42 Avenue de Wagram in Paris
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Two photographs for a photosculpture, of the King Consort of Spain, Francis, Duke of Cádiz (Queen Isabel II can be seen in the background )
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Magazine illustration explaining the process (1897)
Examples of photographic sculptures include the work of experimental artist Oliver Herring.
References
- "Photosculpture". Oxford Companion to the Photograph. Answers.com © Oxford University Press. 2005. Retrieved June 23, 2012.
- Radar, Art. "What is… photosculpture? Art Radar explains | Art Radar".
Additional sources
- Sobieszek, Robert A. 1980. "Sculpture as the Sum of Its Profiles: François Willème and Photosculpture in France, 1859-1868". The Art Bulletin. 62 (4): 617-630.
- Leticia Azcue Brea y Mario Fernández Albarés. "La Photoscultpture. Su desarrollo en la España de Isabel II (1860-1868) = Photosculpture. Its development in the Spain of Isabella II (1860-1868)". Academia: Boletín de la Real Academia de Bellas Artes de san Fernando, Nº 116. Primer y segundo semestres de 2014, pp. 109-154, Madrid 2015, (es separata, español / inglés).
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