Sculpture

My stone sculpture is fabricated by hand using a variety of points, chisels, a special flat or round head hammer, files, rasps, and various polishing grits. I work mainly in a direct carving technique (no model). This approach allows me the freedom to “feel” the form emerge as I carve into the stone. My ideas are inspired by the original shape of the stone; occasionally a model such as a plaster or clay maquette is then used to further explore the form. This challenge of extreme concentration and the steady rhythm of hammer and chisel, allow for many long hours of deep thought, enabling me to experience a bond with the stone.

“Stones in Waiting” January, work in progress with wall journal. Assorted stones. 2023-2024.


Gatherer, alabaster, work in progress in the garden. Fall 2022.



Artist-in-Residence, Stone Carving, Richard Cabe Terraphilia, Salida, Colorado, Sept/Oct 2012

10-1-11

“Each day I was greeted by mountain views. It did not not take long for me to set up space and get to work amongst the rubber rabbitbrush, honey bees and butterflies that would be studio company over the weeks ahead. I made a work bench from wood palettes and carved away under the beautiful Salida sky. Nature truly inspired my work at Terraphilia.”  My residency blog

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Uncovered

Uncovered

Art Review: Jon Lehman, The Patriot Ledger
“White, Black and Shades of Gray,” National Exhibition South Shore Art Center, Cohasset, Mass. 2002.
“The only piece of traditional sculpture is the first thing you see on entering the gallery, and it is a fitting emblem for the entire show.
Uncovered, by Robin MacDonald-Foley, is a standing, trapezoidal chunk of gray limestone, broader at the top than at the base, vaguely suggesting a fragment of ancient Egyptian statuary. Two sides are scored with fine, down-slanted, parallel striations, and two are more deeply carved in a diamond-quilted pattern. The top is a smoothly modeled, sinuously sloping, curved surface, like a shoulder emerging from the stone. Like many of the works here, “Uncovered” suggests more than it reveals.” Photo Credit: Steve Gyurina.