Portrait Sculpture
Learn how to sculpt a portrait in clay.
Get ready to become hooked. Sculpting a portrait in clay is a very rewarding experience. This course will explore how to observe heads – how to see their differences and similarities, and in turn learn how to translate this understanding into a sculpture which captures a likeness of the sitter. On the first day we will sculpt rapidly an under-life-size head of the sitter, without measuring. During the next four days we will more systematically build a life-sized clay portrait of our sitter on an armature/bust-peg. This concentrated modelling will be interspersed with fun exercises – with clay and without – to help train up the eye and hands.
This course will be taught in a way suitable for those with experience of sculpting in clay and those new to it.
Most materials are included in the cost of the course including clay for a life-size portrait. A wooden armature (sometimes called a ‘bust peg’) will be provided. This is yours to keep.
Please bring an apron/bib and an A4 sketchpad and drawing implement (pencil, pen etc). If you have any of the following, bring them. But don’t worry if not as there will be some to share:
- Calipers for measuring
- Metal ruler
- Retractable metal measure
- Wooden and/or metal modeling tools
- Wire (or “cheese”) cutter
- Water spray bottle
- Barbecue sticks
- Cocktail sticks
- Masking tape
- Bin liners (x2)
- Hand-held mirror
- Old newspaper
Costs of hollowing-out and firing are not included. You can take your portrait bust home, hollow it out and take it to a local kiln. However, you may wish to take advantage of the services of Ember Vincent (Phoenix Art Space artist) to both hollow-out and fire your piece. This can be arranged for an additional cost.
Costs: £425
Days: Monday – Friday
Times: 11:30 – 17:30
Dates: Monday 17 to Friday 21 August
Location: White Room
Maximum Attendees: 8
Most materials are included in the cost of the course including clay for a life-size portrait. A wooden armature (sometimes called a ‘bust peg’) will be provided. This is yours to keep.
Please bring an apron/bib and an A4 sketchpad and drawing implement (pencil, pen etc). If you have any of the following, bring them. But don’t worry if not as there will be some to share:
- Calipers for measuring
- Metal ruler
- Retractable metal measure
- Wooden and/or metal modeling tools
- Wire (or “cheese”) cutter
- Water spray bottle
- Barbecue sticks
- Cocktail sticks
- Masking tape
- Bin liners (x2)
- Hand-held mirror
- Old newspaper
‘My passion is for telling stories in bronze – of the struggles for social justice and telling the stories of the lives of those missing from our visual and written histories’. Hazel is best known for her bronze public commissions such as Sir Nigel Gresley at King’s Cross Station, the women biscuit factory workers – the Cracker Packers – in Carlisle, suffragist Elizabeth Wolstenholme Elmy in Congleton and Our Emmeline, suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst in Manchester, which was winner of the Marsh Award for Excellence in Public Sculpture 2021. Hazel is currently working with the ‘A Statue for Ada’ campaign in Crewe, to shed light on the extraordinary Ada Nield Chew (1870-1945), champion of workers’ rights and women’s rights. Hazel is an elected Member of the Royal Society of Sculptors (MRSS).
Learn how to sculpt a portrait in clay.
Get ready to become hooked. Sculpting a portrait in clay is a very rewarding experience. This course will explore how to observe heads – how to see their differences and similarities, and in turn learn how to translate this understanding into a sculpture which captures a likeness of the sitter. On the first day we will sculpt rapidly an under-life-size head of the sitter, without measuring. During the next four days we will more systematically build a life-sized clay portrait of our sitter on an armature/bust-peg. This concentrated modelling will be interspersed with fun exercises – with clay and without – to help train up the eye and hands.
This course will be taught in a way suitable for those with experience of sculpting in clay and those new to it.
Most materials are included in the cost of the course including clay for a life-size portrait. A wooden armature (sometimes called a ‘bust peg’) will be provided. This is yours to keep.
Please bring an apron/bib and an A4 sketchpad and drawing implement (pencil, pen etc). If you have any of the following, bring them. But don’t worry if not as there will be some to share:
- Calipers for measuring
- Metal ruler
- Retractable metal measure
- Wooden and/or metal modeling tools
- Wire (or “cheese”) cutter
- Water spray bottle
- Barbecue sticks
- Cocktail sticks
- Masking tape
- Bin liners (x2)
- Hand-held mirror
- Old newspaper
Costs of hollowing-out and firing are not included. You can take your portrait bust home, hollow it out and take it to a local kiln. However, you may wish to take advantage of the services of Ember Vincent (Phoenix Art Space artist) to both hollow-out and fire your piece. This can be arranged for an additional cost.
Costs: £425
Days: Monday – Friday
Times: 11:30 – 17:30
Dates: Monday 17 to Friday 21 August
Location: White Room
Maximum Attendees: 8
Most materials are included in the cost of the course including clay for a life-size portrait. A wooden armature (sometimes called a ‘bust peg’) will be provided. This is yours to keep.
Please bring an apron/bib and an A4 sketchpad and drawing implement (pencil, pen etc). If you have any of the following, bring them. But don’t worry if not as there will be some to share:
- Calipers for measuring
- Metal ruler
- Retractable metal measure
- Wooden and/or metal modeling tools
- Wire (or “cheese”) cutter
- Water spray bottle
- Barbecue sticks
- Cocktail sticks
- Masking tape
- Bin liners (x2)
- Hand-held mirror
- Old newspaper
‘My passion is for telling stories in bronze – of the struggles for social justice and telling the stories of the lives of those missing from our visual and written histories’. Hazel is best known for her bronze public commissions such as Sir Nigel Gresley at King’s Cross Station, the women biscuit factory workers – the Cracker Packers – in Carlisle, suffragist Elizabeth Wolstenholme Elmy in Congleton and Our Emmeline, suffragette Emmeline Pankhurst in Manchester, which was winner of the Marsh Award for Excellence in Public Sculpture 2021. Hazel is currently working with the ‘A Statue for Ada’ campaign in Crewe, to shed light on the extraordinary Ada Nield Chew (1870-1945), champion of workers’ rights and women’s rights. Hazel is an elected Member of the Royal Society of Sculptors (MRSS).
Course Details
- Monday 17 to Friday 21 August
- 11:30 - 17:30
- White Room, Phoenix Art Space
- 5 Weekday Daytimes
- 8 Maximum Attendees
Members Area