Tuesday, May 21, 2013

It's Summer.....

As winter finally fades and warmer weather arrives,
Modern Art Foundry's Conservation and Maintenance Team
hits the road to provide cleaning and protective waxing services on site. 
                                                                           Iwo Jima Memorial, Fall River, MA (maintenance)

Formally incorporated as one of our services about fifteen years ago, our Conservation and Maintenance Department has been working to provide initial and on going treatment plans to private and public collections, allowing for protection and preservation. First time treatments often focus on restoring a sculpture back to a best-desired state. Annual treatments allow for the continuous care and graceful aging. In some cases, our assessment of a sculpture that has not been treated for sometime requires additional services, such as on site patina restoration, which may be necessary to bring the work back to a unified, healthy condition. While funding is often an issue in on going care, we find owners very receptive to keeping their sculpture looking good. Cleaning, patina balance, and protective waxing are the basic services. We also care for a few bronze fountains. This involves a start up service to get the water pump working in spring, and providing a shut down service to protect the plumbing in winter. Sculpture that has not been treated for many, many years or vandalized may not be repairable in the field and we will recommend the piece be delivered to the foundry for more extensive services. Our overall goal is to achieve protective care while following the least invasive treatments, and cautiously proceeding should action that is more aggressive be needed.


 
As you can see from the images, we work on small and large works. With summer on its way,
our Sculpture Care Specialists are ready to provide protection to sculptures in parks,
schools, private residences, and more.


                                    Samantha Smith statue, Augusta, ME (maintenance)
                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                  (All photo credits on file)

If you see us, please say hello. 
If you have sculpture that needs some care, give us a call or email at
718.728.2030 / info@modernartfoundry.com.
                                                                                                     

Tuesday, October 9, 2012




Jeffrey Spring lectures at the Bruce Museum

October 1, 2012

 
"This was a wonderful opportunity to take the presentation I usually offer at the foundry, on the road. With the help of an exceptional movie made by director's George Stoney and David Bagnall titled, "Casting Gaston Lachaise's Standing Woman", I was able to provide the audience a visual of each step in the process of creating a bronze sculpture. The presentation  was two hours and the docents and friends of the museum were given the opportunity throughout to ask questions."





Standing Woman (Heroic Woman)
Bronze, 88 x 41 1/8 x 19 1/8 inches



Face & Figure
The Sculpture of Gaston Lachaise
to January 6, 2013
BRUCE MUSEUM
One Museum Drive
Greenwich, CT 06830

203-869-0376
brucemuseum.org

Photo credit: Patricia Bradshaw

Monday, September 17, 2012

80th ANNIVERSARY Celebration

The New York Times did an article on us which ran Sunday, September 9, 2012, in the Metropolitan section. The title of the article is;

WHERE BRONZE TRANSFORMS INTO FINE ART
click the following link to view.....








Modern Art Foundry
Serving Artists and Communities Since 1932.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Charles Eugene Gagnon
February 24, 1934 – April 28, 2012

It is with great sadness that we report the death of sculptor Charles Eugene Gagnon, who passed away recently at his residence in Rochester, Minnesota.

From an early age, 1970 or so, I remember Mr. & Mrs. Gagnon visiting the foundry one to two times each year. They would always come to our house one evening for dinner. I remember one time in particular, as we had dinner in Chinatown, which perhaps, was the first time I ever went to that area in Manhattan. Also, without a gap, each year, Mr. & Mrs. Gagnon would send us a poinsettia and a selection of cheeses for our Christmas party. Knowing Chuck all those years made it very easy for us to transition from him working with my father, Bob, to his working with me.  

In 2008, we completed one of Chuck's last major works, a beautiful piece he titled "Bird" with a 5-foot wingspan just touching the top of a wave, the model is shown below in clay. It was a commission for him that is installed on a resort in the Caribbean Island.  

  ("Bird" Clay Model)

Charles Gagnon was born to Eugene and Inez Gagnon and married his best friend, Arlyn Wind in 1964. For almost fifty years, we provided him casting services and considered him both a customer and a friend. Arlyn and he would visit the foundry almost every year from the mid-1960's to just as recently as last year. 

A Memorial Service was held May 5, at the Ranfranz & Vine Funeral Homes' Chapel in Rochester, Minnesota.  

Mr. Gagnon is survived by his lovely wife, Arlyn; and his siblings, Patricia Burns of Denver, CO, Timothy Gagnon of Denver, CO and Mark Gagnon of Kalispell, MT; and eight nieces and nephews.

Chuck's legacy of beautiful inspiring bronze sculptures will always speak of love, hope, and peace to present and future generations and we look forward to our continued work with Mrs. Gagnon to complete Chuck's last few sculptures completed in his studio.

- Jeffrey Spring

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

“......life long quest to bring people together, to achieve understanding.”


   
Image of the maquette for the monument to the memory of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. by Mr. Hayden





Sculptor - Frank Hayden    


Frank Hayden (1934-1988) shared these words during the unveiling of his ten-foot tall sculpture honoring Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in August 1976. Hayden’s abstract egg shape with arms and hands revealed was met with mixed reactions. It was reported that many in attendance expected a life-size statue of Dr. King. Hayden explained “the shape represents life and growth, and the arms and hands are reaching out for brotherhood.” Inside the egg form are passages from Dr. King's speeches, and there is a bullet hole to commemorate Dr. King's assassination.

Bob Spring remembers several visits to meet with Frank at his studio, and working closely with him on a number of important monuments. "We would receive the plaster models at the foundry and make the negative molds and waxes. 
Frank would come to New York and retouch and approve the waxes. We would review the installation blueprints and confirm the details, to get things right the way Frank wanted them.” Bob remembers a memorial we cast remembering the shooting of two Southern University students that occurred in 1972, and recalls that right away Frank wanted to make a memorial. He created a few  sketches and a maquette and asked Mr. Spring to review and provide an estimate. Due to various delays, the memorial was not dedicated until 1979. Although this was a tragic event Frank created a symbolic, inspirational work titled "Lift Every Voice" to not only memorialize and honor but to encourage the idea of hope too.

In 1985 Frank Hayden became Southern University’s first distinguished professor. He had been at the Baton Rouge, Louisiana University’s art department since 1961 following his 1957 graduation from Xavier University in New Orleans, and a master in fine art degree from Notre Dame University where he studied with Ivan Mestrovic. Frank also traveled to Munich, Germany on a Fulbright Fellowship and attended the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen, Denmark

"It was incredibly difficult to receive the news of Frank's death. We had shared a number of working experiences and became friends too. I will never forget his hospitality during my visits to New Orleans and taking me to the Latin Quarter for the first time, where I had a huge platter of crawfish. His mentally ill son tragically shot him at the age of 52. I cannot help but believe we had many more years of working together and he had so much more to offer all of us. He was always a modest man but I can tell you that to know him, you would simply be inspired," says Mr. Spring.

-Excerpt from an extensive recorded conversation of Mr. Bob Spring and Patricia Bradshaw, 2012

-Written and edited by Jeffrey Spring


Note:
Please contact the Modern Art Foundry office with inquires about contracted services of Mr. Spring. He is available for consultations and lectures.

 

Monday, January 30, 2012

I Met Jacques Lipchitz When I Was Eight Years Old


                                           L to R- MAF employee, J. C. Spring, J. Lipchitz, J. Spring, property of MAF

The day that I met Jacques Lipchitz was a Saturday. My father had taken me to work that day and introduced me to Mr. Lipchitz, who smiled and said hello. My first memory was watching him work on a wax sculpture. He was wearing a beret and had a metal tool in his hand. When he touched this tool to the wax sculpture, smoke would rise and some of the wax would melt. Later on, I found out the tool was made of cast iron and came in many different sizes. When heated, it stayed hot for quite a while. He used this tool to retouch the wax pattern that my father’s foundry had made for him. It was fascinating to watch him work. I did not know then but in about fifteen or so years Jacques Lipchitz would become an important person in my life, helping me with many foundry skills and affording me an opportunity to grow as an artisan while working on his pieces.

I remember when the CBS show Let’s Take a Trip filmed an episode at Modern Art Foundry in 1957. I had a small part demonstrating how to pin a core nail hole closed and worked directly with Mr. Lipchitz on his patina for the sculpture Pierrot. A few years ago, we transferred the episode to DVD; I cannot believe how young we all looked.

Most importantly, Mr. Lipchitz was at the foundry when my father told me I was needed to take over the patina work. Mr. Lipchitz was casting a number of small pieces at this time. He was very patient with me because he knew the colors he wanted and how to achieve them. He would not settle for good. He wanted it to be right. This was a benefit for me because I learned how to color and to please a customer. It was about one year before I was comfortable. Eventually, Mr. Lipchitz would allow me to patina his bronzes without his supervision.

Mr. Lipchitz developed a work pattern that allowed him to spend half the year in the United States and half the year in Italy. He would send us a letter before returning to New York. The letter would tell us which plasters to retrieve from his studio in order to prepare waxes for his arrival in the warmer months. In addition, we would have bronzes ready for him from his last trip. It was an exciting time at Modern Art Foundry. Mr. Lipchitz once told me he loved returning to New York City each year. When the plane landed and he heard the announcement from the pilot welcoming them to New York, he'd say, "'there is like electricity in the air, I get charged up again. It is so, exciting and there is so much happening in NYC!'”

I said goodbye to Mr. Lipchitz for the last time in May 1973, 16 days before he died.  He was at the foundry one last time before leaving to go back to Italy. Oddly, about a week later I saw him on 2nd Avenue and 51st Street in Manhattan. I was waiting at a red light and across the busy street; I saw Mr. and Mrs. Lipchitz walking. Of course, he had his blue beret on but the light changed and I did not have a chance to wave hello.

A week or so later he died while on vacation at Capri’s Blue Grotto, his usual place for relaxation when returning to Italy by ship. He was buried in Jerusalem.

Jacques Lipchitz taught me many things. We had a business relationship and a friendship. I was very sad when he passed away. It was 33 years since our first meeting. I felt I had lost a friend, a teacher, and a second father.

MY LIFE INSIDE ART, Bob Spring's reflections on his fifty plus years of experiences in the art casting business, is being catalogued by Patricia Bradshaw.  Patricia is coordinating an on going collection process that includes interviews, journal writings, and recorded memories for publication in print, digital, and sound mediums. The above excerpt has been edited by Jeffrey Spring.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Approaching 80 Years



As Modern Art Foundry nears eighty years in the fine art casting business, we have been working with Bob Spring, at Modern Art Foundry full-time since 1955, to collect his stories and memories of his life working for artists. In this Newsletter we would like to share a conversation between Bob and Patricia Bradshaw regarding the Alice in Wonderland monument by Jose De Creeft located on the east side of Central Park, north of the Conservatory Water at 72nd Street.

Artist José De Creeft was born in Guadalajara, Spain in 1884. He moved to the United States in 1929 and became a citizen in 1940. He had a long and successful career as both sculptor and teacher. Mr. De Creeft died in New York in 1982. 

The following is a summary of a conversation recorded in February 2011.            

Today, let us talk about the Alice in Wonderland sculpture located in Central Park.
De Creeft’s idea was that this monument needed to be very child friendly. The layout of the maquette had the statues and the composition so that children would be able to climb on the piece easily. Of course, it is dominated by Alice sitting on the mushroom. Alice is welcoming all to come up, sit with her, and look at the cat up in the little tree behind her with its silly grin. The mushrooms serve to support your climb up and allow you access to the sculpture.

Did the maquette come to the foundry full size?
We received the full size enlargement, which was created by the sculptors of that era who worked as professional enlargers. De Creeft supervised the enlargement and it was delivered to the foundry. 

Did you do any of the finishing or patina on it?
Yes. I got out of the service in 1955, so by the time that job came into the foundry I was already working in the finishing room. I did not do all of it, but I did some. I do remember finishing the big mushroom. It was cast in sections, and some of the welding was done on the inside. There was not enough room inside of the bronze for me use the mask with the dark glasses to protect my eyes from being burned, so I held the glass without the hood and I tack welded it. Little did I know, that the ultra-violet light was bouncing off the top of the bronze and into my eyes. I went home that night and in the middle of the night, it felt like I had sand in my eyes. It hurt so much the next day that I went to have them checked by my doctor. What happened was, my retinas were burned and I suffered for many years after that with night driving because it would give me headaches.

Was it delivered in one piece?
Yes. We have a number of foundry pictures of the work in our yard. One with the whole foundry staff that we have published a few times. When it was finished Mr. Delacorte, Mrs. De Creeft, and a number of city officials visited the foundry for final acceptance. My father was the foundry president and presented the work to those visiting, my brother John was there too. It was craned on to a flat bed truck and traveled through the streets of Queens. I think it went over the Triboro Bridge, down Second Avenue, then over to Central Park. Another crane was waiting there and they picked the whole thing up and sat it in place. We had prepared templates for the piece indicating where the pins would come out, holes were drilled into the concrete base, and it was dry fit to make sure it was ok. It was installed and we walked away. Later on, they had a ceremony. It has been there since and is a favorite spot for locals and tourists, and is a city sensation as far as I am concerned.

Do you remember any concerns about the public being able to climb on the work?
When the piece was completed, my job was to rub my hands all over the surface of the statue to check if there was anything sharp that somebody could scratch or cut themselves on. If anything was sharp – I had to matte it down. I actually touched every inch of the statue to make sure it was safe.

Any final thoughts?
It is obviously an historic and important part of New York City’s landscape. I believe Mr. De Creeft created a very successful public work and Modern Art Foundry has always been proud of having cast this work for him and the city.

MY LIFE INSIDE ART, Bob Spring's reflections on his fifty plus years of experiences in the art casting business, is being catalogued by Patricia Bradshaw.  Patricia is coordinating an on going collection process that includes interviews, journal writings, and recorded memories for publication in print, digital, and sound mediums. The above excerpt has been edited by Jeffrey Spring.