Whilst this man did indeed use power tools, the skill he possess is mindblowing. Any body that doesn't work with their hands does not realise the 'touch' and 'feel' thats only years and years of experience bring. This man has skill that most do not possess, only when you can do the same can you criticise. Hats off to him.
Imagine having that much skill & patience to sculpt something as beautiful as that. I have never been jealous of anyone but I am certainly envious of the skills used here. Fantastic 👍👍👍👍
How could you ever pay this Gentleman a compliment that is fitting for the skill he has. I cannot find any words to describe his outstanding ability to produce work beyond perfection.
The craftsmanship and the art of carving stone into _splendid_ pieces of art is breathtakingly amazing. All the intricate details. Am surprised that these men are not muscular, even with power tools it still seems hard work turning marble into something marvelous.
I so enjoyed watching. I've been a wet clay sculptor most of my life but took a stone carving class a few yrs. ago. It was euphoric! I was covered in it and felt amazing! Kudos to you!!
Is it me or was the opening music the Kingdom Hearts theme? Also, what beautiful skills being displayed here! I’m an artist, not with stone though, and watching these amazing crafters at work brought tears to my eyes. It is a wonderful blessing to be able to create where there once was nothing, to be able to bring the images of the mind into reality. I love drawing so much!
I'll tell you the genius of these men. Put the same exact tools and conditions in people's hands now & they will do what millions of people cannot. They are still modern day artists. And yes, Michelangelo & Bernini were incredible.
I have to disagree. I believe that almost everyone possesses the ability to do these things, however there's a limited number of people who are willing to take the time and energy to do the work, and learn the lessons.
Чудо. Наконец я воочию увидела, как рождаются из куска мрамора те замечательные статуи, которые стоят в музеях! И мое восхищение мастерами, создающими их, увеличилось стократно! Вот бы такие фильмы можно было посмотреть в музеях интерактивно! Как было бы хорошо и правильно!
phuck ewe programmers should use 50 years old massive computers, armies should go back to spiers and swords, and you should stop using youtube or even electricity and entertain yourself like people did back in the old days because you are cheating.....That's nonsense, Michelangelo had tools that people didn't have 100 years before him too, there's something called progress.
Andres Chile they had help. Michelangelo, for example managed a group of workers, he hired them and paid them. He had people clearing away debri, sharpening his chisels, cooking his food, bringing him his food, washing his clothes... he did not paint the chapel ceiling all by himself as history would have us believe. He had a crew of approx 30 men. He did not do all of the painting or even most of the sketches... the paintings were first done as sketches which were transferred directly to the plaster using mechanical means and then quickly painted.
Those guys only did a similar job to thus guy but just took longer because they didn't have the modern equipment like this guy has...they were no better
Finally!! an honest contemporary stone carving video that shows drilling(pointing) to be the primary means of copying form from a plaster or clay original. FAR too many such YT videos begin with the sculptor cutting down the stone to basic envelope shape, then skip forward to detail work done with a fine chisel, suggesting falsely that final result was achieved wholly by chisel. Often included is a voice-over by the sculptor musing poetically on the meaning of (and their struggles with) a practice now defunct and alien in this digital world... and it's not as if drilling itself is some 20thC invention, it goes back over 200 years.
Marble dust is very different from silica which is basically glass... if you’re worried about people’s lungs you should consider passing out masks at public beaches.
Godwant sand on beaches is HUGE compared to the size of particles that can be produced by machine work and it is the size of the particles that matters. Large ones don't make it into the alveoli. If this is what this guy does regularly, he should protect his lungs (and eyes).
Thanks for posting this fascinating film up. What a great job he's got.. I'm a self taught mason but never used marble. I did once carve the 3 wise monkey's into a piece of Beer stone that came from a quarry used since Roman times and is hard to find. Time seems to fly by when you find a shape in a chunk of stone and working to carve it out. It's a good feeling and good for the soul, bashing at a rock with a hammer and chisel. No limp wristed air tools for me, it's far too easy.
11:10 I cut this part from the video, made it into a gif, and now I am just randomly sending it to people with no explanation. I am having the time of my life.
Semplicemente: grazie 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼❤️il cuore mi si riempie quando guardo lavorare artisti con passione....poi il marmo come il grande Canova ❤️
MICHAELANGELO HAS NOY ONLY SCULPTED AWESOME PIETA BUT ALSO MOST ADMIRED FRESCO PAINTINGS ON GENESIS ON THE CEILING OF SISTINE CHAPEL 500 YEARS AGO WHICH CAN NOT BE SURPASSED..THAT IS WHY HE IS CALLED DIVINE MICHAELANĢELO ANILKUMAR ..MUMBAI..INDIA..
I have been thinking the very same as I watched these artisans. When they are older, and don't work anymore they will truly suffer. Yet their work will live on.
It's funny-as beautiful as the piece is, I couldn't help but wonder why no one wore ear or lung protection,to say nothing of the damage to arms and back- all to amuse rich people. He's not expressing anything so much as self contempt. Makes me grateful for OSHA. The work is amusing tho.
I carve stone and breathing in rock dust isn't as big of a concern if you were to breathe in pottery dust. It wont really effect you that much and to the one comment about arms and back yeah it's puts strain on them but you build up sculptors muscles in your arms so after a while and experience it isn't that bad
Astonishing skills being masterfully executed. The understanding of material, visual intelligence and hand skills are a joy to watch. If life were just, these gentlemen would be very rich financially to match such skills. Beautiful.
What incredible artistic talent and skill! I'm surprised at just how soft the marble actually seems, though I'm sure the power tools make it look more so. Jerry of San Diego
Phenomenal workmanship. I had no idea this is what it took to recreate an original statue. These gentleman are not only artists unto themselves--they are Saints having this much passion and patience. I agree with everyone else's comments--please wear a mask.
Makes me think of masters of the old. Myron, Polykleitos and then Donatello, Michelangelo and Bernini!!! No electricity, no power tools and yet, their works carved with such beauty, precision and detail are far superior to the art of today. Think of the countless hours spent with a chisel carving such masterpieces as Discobolus, David, Apollo and Daphne! Such disciplined, repetitive work. The amazing devotion and massive talents leading to revealing beauty, thought, movement, ideas. Pieces that after hundreds of years still mean everything, are able to move us and transform us. It seems we've lost the key to our own hearts and there is no return.
This was mindblowing to watch ,respect to any sculptor who choose to carve a stone ,that has to be one off the hardest art discipline to master ! I was not even breathing watching it ,you become imerse in whole process
I am self teaching right now working with marble I have some works in a gallery,I have a 4 1/2 inch grinder and some hand tool,how amazing it is to see the details in this video thank you for sharing,this is great!
Hi friend,well my self is Mohammad Imran from Agra India and my self is a artisian of fine quality marble inlay work here in Agra at the city of the beautiful monument Tajmahal.we also make so many beautiful articles here in the town and I run my own workshop to give training for New artist.here it's my what's app mobile number is +919359963852.thanks a lots.
What an amazing thing to see .... I would love to feel the same dimensional space as this person, it’s as if he reaches into the marble and pulls out a fantasy.
The metrical slowness of the movement "sculpts" the sculptor's idea. If I were a robot I would be humbled by my "empty precision." A work done by human beings with feeling at the tip of their fingers. Only masters within this "sanctuary", an atmosphere of waiting and searching.
Да, и е много жалко, че по времето на Микеланджело е нямало такива инструменти. Аз лично щях да съм щастлива, ако света имаше 10 пъти повече негови скулптури. На мен намаше да ми дойдат прекалено много.
@@ЮлианаСотирова Зачем? Если бы их было настолько больше, то не было бы оригинальности. Тем более скульптуры и сейчас очень много. В том же Эрмитаже в Санкт-Петербурге просто бессчётное количество, а это ведь не Греция, не Италия, не Рим...
molto bella è un'opera di un grande artista e genio.- Mi congratulo con l'artista e la galleria per questo video e mostro al mondo cosa si può fare con il cuore.-Saluti dalla città di Chicago, Illinois. Stati Uniti d'America (Pittore messicano O Romero)
Talent, imagine the sculptor that did the original, from his mind to the stone, the sculptor on the video has his talent to duplicate using the tools like a real master. I’m impressed
Its fascinating to watch.... The artist will be gone, but that sculpture will remain for centuries to come...So the sculptor will be immortalised through his work!
I head this piano intro in the video game kingdom hearts on its menu screen after the intro song. Not sure if it’s a piano piece that already existed before the game or not but it’s a nice piano piece. Works nice here too!
Thank you for your creativity I wished I had some of it I hamer and Chelsea on a bird bath I didn't think i could do. what you do God has bless you thank you again.
Hello hello.. Thank you for this most interesting presentation. For the first time I could see so close the instrument used to take the measurements of the model sculpture. Beautiful instrument. Thanks to your video and meaningful close-ups I could even understand how in principle the replication is done. The iron rod has to be pushed further and further on the replica stone surface till the bronze lock screw reaches the gage and cannot go further. So you dig the stone of the replica till the iron rod is reaching this point. Still I did not understand how you determined the main fix point.. for everything.. but I guess it may be done at the start, prior to all the rest of the work.. probably a point on top of the models head in combination with the 2 fix points I noticed on the front down base. (?). I also liked the honesty in this film which is to show the use of modern tools such as an electric diamond blade side grinder. I mean.. that the video is not enacted to make people believe that these works of art are crafted only with hammers and chisels to make them appear more valuable to potential buyers. Also I was feeling "better" when I saw the artist getting plenty of dust in his face and on his head while cutting the stone with his grinder..and without mask, because I also like to work often in this way.. because I can't stand the mask which is making my eye glasses foggy and blurring my vision. Which is very counter productive for creativity. I can imagine now how a Master would let his apprentice do the rough work to get closer to the final shape without risking to ruin the stone and then take over gradually. In the old times this must have been the same. When a clay model stood beside the marble block.. and the Master gave the instructions to reduce the block to his several helpers. He could do another more challenging work closer to the finishing stage or have a rest.. relaxing a bit in town in the tavern.. 😁. Right now I only do rough work directly into the rocks without model.. but your video inspires me to do a duplicate later of one of my own carvings.. which could speed up the process to have several items of the same design. Thanks again.. Here is what I do. Greeting you from the former Ceylon. ruclips.net/video/JbS1ZcULLk4/видео.html
Un gran trabajo. En España eso es una máquina de sacar de punto. ¿ Como se llama en Italia? Felicidades por el gran trabajo y la experiencia que se ve que tienes.
So nice very talented marble sculptures/ artists they are(salute you), I wish I would have lived in Italy to gain such skills like these😏😏imagine when a time a genius sculptor like Micheal A. would have been lived in our present time with a modern carving tools?would it be even more wonderful like those in video?
Whilst this man did indeed use power tools, the skill he possess is mindblowing. Any body that doesn't work with their hands does not realise the 'touch' and 'feel' thats only years and years of experience bring. This man has skill that most do not possess, only when you can do the same can you criticise. Hats off to him.
He is gifted. While I understand what you are saying, the reality is that anyone can criticize if they choose.
Viva Italia 💚🤍❤️ la sua cultura, la sua lingua, la sua storia. Il suo patrimonio ❤❤❤
Magnifico documentario, complimenti allo scultore, grazie per il video.
Imagine having that much skill & patience to sculpt something as beautiful as that. I have never been jealous of anyone but I am certainly envious of the skills used here. Fantastic 👍👍👍👍
How could you ever pay this Gentleman a compliment that is fitting for the skill he has. I cannot find any words to describe his outstanding ability to produce work beyond perfection.
Shut up. You make me vomit.
De grands artistes doués d'un immense talent. Réussir à reconstituer ces chefs d'oeuvre de l'histoire, il faut le faire. Bravo!
The craftsmanship and the art of carving stone into _splendid_ pieces of art is breathtakingly amazing. All the intricate details. Am surprised that these men are not muscular, even with power tools it still seems hard work turning marble into something marvelous.
I so enjoyed watching. I've been a wet clay sculptor most of my life but took a stone carving class a few yrs. ago. It was euphoric! I was covered in it and felt amazing! Kudos to you!!
What was it like to work in subtractive sculpting instead of additive?
@@scottcates She was covered in it.
Absolute Master. I love your work Sir. I lay stone and brick for a living but clearly you are the definition of Stone Mason.
Obras de arte que durarán siglos y será recordado por siempre, maestro.
Enhorabuena.
Is it me or was the opening music the Kingdom Hearts theme?
Also, what beautiful skills being displayed here! I’m an artist, not with stone though, and watching these amazing crafters at work brought tears to my eyes. It is a wonderful blessing to be able to create where there once was nothing, to be able to bring the images of the mind into reality. I love drawing so much!
Yeees, Dearly Beloved from KH series, I just got goosebumps here!!!
I started dying laughing and went straight to the comments.
Wonderful Maestro, shame he does not protect his ears, eyes, or lungs and live longer to enjoy his grandchildren.
I love seeing artists at work! 😍❤️ The dedication of making a beautiful piece gets me every time.
I'll tell you the genius of these men. Put the same exact tools and conditions in people's hands now & they will do what millions of people cannot. They are still modern day artists. And yes, Michelangelo & Bernini were incredible.
I have to disagree.
I believe that almost everyone possesses the ability to do these things, however there's a limited number of people who are willing to take the time and energy to do the work, and learn the lessons.
Чудо. Наконец я воочию увидела, как рождаются из куска мрамора те замечательные статуи, которые стоят в музеях! И мое восхищение мастерами, создающими их, увеличилось стократно! Вот бы такие фильмы можно было посмотреть в музеях интерактивно! Как было бы хорошо и правильно!
The level of skill, patience, technique, eye, endurance is insane. I cant even get my daughters to spend a few monutes washing the dishes.
Imagine that work made with no electricity and anything but a hammer and chisel... now you understand the magnificence of Michelangelo or Bernini
phuck ewe oh yea cheating you go and do it then you mong
phuck ewe programmers should use 50 years old massive computers, armies should go back to spiers and swords, and you should stop using youtube or even electricity and entertain yourself like people did back in the old days because you are cheating.....That's nonsense, Michelangelo had tools that people didn't have 100 years before him too, there's something called progress.
Andres Chile they had help. Michelangelo, for example managed a group of workers, he hired them and paid them. He had people clearing away debri, sharpening his chisels, cooking his food, bringing him his food, washing his clothes... he did not paint the chapel ceiling all by himself as history would have us believe. He had a crew of approx 30 men. He did not do all of the painting or even most of the sketches... the paintings were first done as sketches which were transferred directly to the plaster using mechanical means and then quickly painted.
exact comment I would make
Those guys only did a similar job to thus guy but just took longer because they didn't have the modern equipment like this guy has...they were no better
Finally!! an honest contemporary stone carving video that shows drilling(pointing) to be the primary means of copying form from a plaster or clay original. FAR too many such YT videos begin with the sculptor cutting down the stone to basic envelope shape, then skip forward to detail work done with a fine chisel, suggesting falsely that final result was achieved wholly by chisel. Often included is a voice-over by the sculptor musing poetically on the meaning of (and their struggles with) a practice now defunct and alien in this digital world... and it's not as if drilling itself is some 20thC invention, it goes back over 200 years.
@@btewb hy did you know what the name of that tools?
I wish this guy would wear a mask to guard his lungs, it's a rarity to find artists this good.
calcium derived from marble does absolutely no harm to your lungs. people should know.
Galleria Frilli but it will still collect there
Galleria Frilli Any dust is potentially harmful, people should know. Ask for Pneumoconiosis and Pulmonary fibrosis.
Marble dust is very different from silica which is basically glass... if you’re worried about people’s lungs you should consider passing out masks at public beaches.
Godwant sand on beaches is HUGE compared to the size of particles that can be produced by machine work and it is the size of the particles that matters. Large ones don't make it into the alveoli.
If this is what this guy does regularly, he should protect his lungs (and eyes).
Fascinating...I hadn't realized marble was such a soft stone. Thankyou.
I'm an old decorative rock miner & I would love to study with this guy, that's always been a dream of mine to do this.
Thanks for posting this fascinating film up. What a great job he's got.. I'm a self taught mason but never used marble. I did once carve the 3 wise monkey's into a piece of Beer stone that came from a quarry used since Roman times and is hard to find. Time seems to fly by when you find a shape in a chunk of stone and working to carve it out. It's a good feeling and good for the soul, bashing at a rock with a hammer and chisel. No limp wristed air tools for me, it's far too easy.
OMG...skill we will loose if it’s not passed to generations. Give this artist lot of credit.
Also, it pleases me that so many people, by their comments, appreciate this fabulous form of art. Jerry
11:10 I cut this part from the video, made it into a gif, and now I am just randomly sending it to people with no explanation. I am having the time of my life.
i'm watching this at work and I just bursted out laughing when i clicked the time stamp... damn you, lol.
muhsides
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@phuck ewe 😂😂😂😂
12:50
Brother you have been blessed by God with amazing talent. Please protect your lungs and wear mask.
Semplicemente: grazie 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼❤️il cuore mi si riempie quando guardo lavorare artisti con passione....poi il marmo come il grande Canova ❤️
Thank you, Italy, for continuing this great tradition.
MICHAELANGELO HAS NOY ONLY SCULPTED AWESOME PIETA BUT ALSO MOST ADMIRED FRESCO PAINTINGS ON GENESIS ON THE CEILING OF SISTINE CHAPEL 500 YEARS AGO WHICH CAN NOT BE SURPASSED..THAT IS WHY HE IS CALLED DIVINE MICHAELANĢELO ANILKUMAR ..MUMBAI..INDIA..
that poor dudes lungs.
I have been thinking the very same as I watched these artisans. When they are older, and don't work anymore they will truly suffer. Yet their work will live on.
Joseph Lynn I work at a limestone sculpture and I am 15 I am ruined
It's funny-as beautiful as the piece is, I couldn't help but wonder why no one wore ear or lung protection,to say nothing of the damage to arms and back- all to amuse rich people. He's not expressing anything so much as self contempt. Makes me grateful for OSHA. The work is amusing tho.
Marble is calcium based not silicon based so silicosis isn't a concern.
I carve stone and breathing in rock dust isn't as big of a concern if you were to breathe in pottery dust. It wont really effect you that much and to the one comment about arms and back yeah it's puts strain on them but you build up sculptors muscles in your arms so after a while and experience it isn't that bad
Astonishing skills being masterfully executed. The understanding of material, visual intelligence and hand skills are a joy to watch. If life were just, these gentlemen would be very rich financially to match such skills. Beautiful.
The work you do is lovely as I have wrote to you about making me 2 cats looking forward and proud love dianne and my 11cats.
What incredible artistic talent and skill! I'm surprised at just how soft the marble actually seems, though I'm sure the power tools make it look more so. Jerry of San Diego
Phenomenal workmanship. I had no idea this is what it took to recreate an original statue. These gentleman are not only artists unto themselves--they are
Saints having this much passion and patience. I agree with everyone else's comments--please wear a mask.
I am Vietnamese. Always keep an eye on your taste. Great, Thank you for visiting me.
Love it!! So beautiful!! 💕💕💕Even the music is jibing. Happy new year!
Makes me think of masters of the old. Myron, Polykleitos and then Donatello, Michelangelo and Bernini!!! No electricity, no power tools and yet, their works carved with such beauty, precision and detail are far superior to the art of today. Think of the countless hours spent with a chisel carving such masterpieces as Discobolus, David, Apollo and Daphne! Such disciplined, repetitive work. The amazing devotion and massive talents leading to revealing beauty, thought, movement, ideas. Pieces that after hundreds of years still mean everything, are able to move us and transform us. It seems we've lost the key to our own hearts and there is no return.
Dearly Beloved OMG how much I love listening to this.
True Art 😍😍😍🇦🇺 I could watch this all day.
Forgive my tears Maestro, the beauty is overtaking
Wonderful skills.. he’s a hero of mine now, not a drop of PPE or Risk Assessment.. BRAVO RAGAZZA !!!
a mon avis,la plus belle vidéo de sculpture du web.félicitations !
This was mindblowing to watch ,respect to any sculptor who choose to carve a stone ,that has to be one off the hardest art discipline to master ! I was not even breathing watching it ,you become imerse in whole process
A great and grand sculpture worthy of appreciation. Happy 😊 to see it . Thanks 😊
I am self teaching right now working with marble I have some works in a gallery,I have a 4 1/2 inch grinder and some hand tool,how amazing it is to see the details in this video thank you for sharing,this is great!
I'm in the same boat! This is the closest thing to a good tutorial I can find.
Hy, can you guys tell me every tools that this mahestro use in this video please
truly amazing, and the whole process is relaxing to watch!
Hi friend,well my self is Mohammad Imran from Agra India and my self is a artisian of fine quality marble inlay work here in Agra at the city of the beautiful monument Tajmahal.we also make so many beautiful articles here in the town and I run my own workshop to give training for New artist.here it's my what's app mobile number is +919359963852.thanks a lots.
Wielki szacunek dla tego Pana mistrz świata 👍
What an amazing thing to see .... I would love to feel the same dimensional space as this person, it’s as if he reaches into the marble and pulls out a fantasy.
Quel travail!!! Du superbe ouvrage merci :) :) :)
Sir aapki Jitni tareef ki jae utni hi kam hai, sach mai very beautiful
The metrical slowness of the movement "sculpts" the sculptor's idea. If I were a robot I would be humbled by my "empty precision." A work done by human beings with feeling at the tip of their fingers. Only masters within this "sanctuary", an atmosphere of waiting and searching.
Wow! What a wonderful art!
Incredible skill. We humans have the ability to be so creative & yet we seem to enjoy being destructive . 👍
So true.
Well said
I hear you. Sculpture of stone and wood is an act of creative destruction. Amazing.
I truly honestly admire anyone with the patience and skill to do this
Quel travail.... Magnifique, énorme !
Fantastic record - what a mesmerising process, and wonderful craftsmanship
Imagine Michelangelo sculpting the Pieta without those power tools!
Да, и е много жалко, че по времето на Микеланджело е нямало такива инструменти. Аз лично щях да съм щастлива, ако света имаше 10 пъти повече негови скулптури. На мен намаше да ми дойдат прекалено много.
@@ЮлианаСотирова Зачем? Если бы их было настолько больше, то не было бы оригинальности. Тем более скульптуры и сейчас очень много. В том же Эрмитаже в Санкт-Петербурге просто бессчётное количество, а это ведь не Греция, не Италия, не Рим...
Nicos Adamides He used running water over the slab to soften it up.
If would like to see artist doing the work with no power tools, just hammer and chisel
Imagine what He could create with Power Tools.
Wow........what a gift!!! Thank you
The culture of art is ALWAYS beauty. This is beauty.
Genius ! Even without the safety precautions you accomplished great projects. I wanna be you
ottimo lavoro amico congratulazioni
Amazin, Beautiful and incredibly skilled hands...
I admire your talent...
I felt this video was beautiful visually and musically.
What grace to do so much work, and hand over your work to someone else to finish it!
Sir Great art work,Very hard art,thank for that.
Mind blowing.. amazing work..
molto bella è un'opera di un grande artista e genio.- Mi congratulo con l'artista e la galleria per questo video e mostro al mondo cosa si può fare con il cuore.-Saluti dalla città di Chicago, Illinois. Stati Uniti d'America
(Pittore messicano O Romero)
I am speechless. Just gorgeous...
Maestro 😊 thank you so much for the video. Admires must Become Makers/ Doers 😊
I just scrolled down here for the Kingdom Hearts comments
Talent, imagine the sculptor that did the original, from his mind to the stone, the sculptor on the video has his talent to duplicate using the tools like a real master.
I’m impressed
Its fascinating to watch.... The artist will be gone, but that sculpture will remain for centuries to come...So the sculptor will be immortalised through his work!
Wow the work it takes...beautiful
Fantastic work. I really have no idea what kind of hard work it requires but... wear a particle respirator, god damn.
I could watch this all day.
I head this piano intro in the video game kingdom hearts on its menu screen after the intro song. Not sure if it’s a piano piece that already existed before the game or not but it’s a nice piano piece. Works nice here too!
Wow great work I love it
Great art all the best
To jsou panečku mistři umění !
wheres goofy? donald are u ther?!1
This is wonderful. I am a drawer that would like to branch out into sculpting. Thank you for your talent.
IMAGINE how BADASS the OLD SCHOOL SCULPTERS had to be !
Thank you for your creativity I wished I had some of it I hamer and Chelsea on a bird bath I didn't think i could do. what you do God has bless you thank you again.
Michelangelo without these power tools, must have had alot of patience and passion
And some talent as well you know!
No word's for this artist
wonderful job! ❤
O MEU SONHO É SER UM DIA UM ARTISTA NA ARIA DA ESCULTURA ... QUE BELAS OBRAS PRIMAS QUE VEJO A SEREM PRODUZIDAS... BRAVO 👏👏👏
Wonderful job !!
Mesmerizing. Thanks for sharing,......the reproduction was immaculate.
Hello hello.. Thank you for this most interesting presentation. For the first time I could see so close the instrument used to take the measurements of the model sculpture. Beautiful instrument. Thanks to your video and meaningful close-ups I could even understand how in principle the replication is done. The iron rod has to be pushed further and further on the replica stone surface till the bronze lock screw reaches the gage and cannot go further. So you dig the stone of the replica till the iron rod is reaching this point. Still I did not understand how you determined the main fix point.. for everything.. but I guess it may be done at the start, prior to all the rest of the work.. probably a point on top of the models head in combination with the 2 fix points I noticed on the front down base. (?). I also liked the honesty in this film which is to show the use of modern tools such as an electric diamond blade side grinder. I mean.. that the video is not enacted to make people believe that these works of art are crafted only with hammers and chisels to make them appear more valuable to potential buyers. Also I was feeling "better" when I saw the artist getting plenty of dust in his face and on his head while cutting the stone with his grinder..and without mask, because I also like to work often in this way.. because I can't stand the mask which is making my eye glasses foggy and blurring my vision. Which is very counter productive for creativity. I can imagine now how a Master would let his apprentice do the rough work to get closer to the final shape without risking to ruin the stone and then take over gradually. In the old times this must have been the same. When a clay model stood beside the marble block.. and the Master gave the instructions to reduce the block to his several helpers. He could do another more challenging work closer to the finishing stage or have a rest.. relaxing a bit in town in the tavern.. 😁. Right now I only do rough work directly into the rocks without model.. but your video inspires me to do a duplicate later of one of my own carvings.. which could speed up the process to have several items of the same design.
Thanks again.. Here is what I do.
Greeting you from the former Ceylon.
ruclips.net/video/JbS1ZcULLk4/видео.html
I'm a simple man. I see marble carvings and hear the kingdom hearts soundtrack...I click like
Beautiful work. Thank you.
If Michelangelo had modern tools he would have made the statues sing and dance. Beautiful work
Beautiful job son Scotland sends its regards
wow, art great, thank you for sharing
Thank you! Sculpture is my favorite form of art!
k-kingdom hearts?!??!
Bella Marie honestly it's so distracting I had to stop watching
Bella Marie yup, kingdom hearts.
Makes we wanna play KH2 🥲
Un gran trabajo. En España eso es una máquina de sacar de punto. ¿ Como se llama en Italia?
Felicidades por el gran trabajo y la experiencia que se ve que tienes.
BRAVO , MAESTRO , BRAVO !
So nice very talented marble sculptures/ artists they are(salute you), I wish I would have lived in Italy to gain such skills like these😏😏imagine when a time a genius sculptor like Micheal A. would have been lived in our present time with a modern carving tools?would it be even more wonderful like those in video?
Extraordinaire !
10:59 The statutes face is perfect for what he just did xD
B Lady lololol