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Anne-Claire van den Elshout:

Icarus

12 February 2025 | 25 minutes
Woman sanding and peeking through a curved stone sculpture

Anne-Claire van den Elshout, Circle of Life. Photo: Gail Skoff

Dutch artist Anne-Claire trained and worked as a lawyer until she followed her heart to become an artist. She moved to Pietrasanta, where she lived, and worked, for 15 years. Now she divides her time between the Hague and Pietrasanta.

After the pandemic she was looking for a way to capture peoples’ thoughts and emotions in order to make a three-dimensional sculpture of them in clay. 

3D printing machine extruding dark grey clay as a human head with woman's hands sculpting it

Anne-Claire touches up one of the My Collection of Souls. Photo: Gail Skoff

man with 3D printing machine

Claudio Giustiniani, ArtaxLab. Photo: Gail Skoff

Having discovered that a traditional scanner was unable to grab the emotion she saw in a split second, Anne-Claire was happy to meet Claudio Giustiniani of ArtaxLab in Pietrasanta, who showed her how he used 30 Nikon cameras in conjunction with a 3-D printer. Working with Claudio she could get what she wanted and began her project to capture the emotions around the experience of COVID-19 called My Collection of Souls.

woman sitting in chair surrounded by cameras at various angles

Anne-Claire photographs Cher Lewis. Photo: Gail Skoff

To create My Collection of Souls Anne-Claire talked to the person about COVID-19 and, at the exact moment she saw their strongest expression, she pressed the button on the cameras. Claudio and she discuss in this episode how they created the work - from taking the photograph through to the finished collection.

a selection of white sculpted heads on plinths in a grand foyer

Anne-Claire van den Elshout, My Collection of Souls. Photo: Nicola Gnesi

3D printed head of a man, made with thick layers

Anne-Claire van den Elshout, My Collection of Souls. Photo: Nicola Gnesi

3D printed head of a woman with headscarf, made with thick layers

Anne-Claire van den Elshout, My Collection of Souls. Photo: Nicola Gnesi

Another collaboration Anne-Claire made was with photographer Gail Skoff.

Gail came to this part of Italy in 2017 to photograph the quarries of Carrara but soon became fascinated by the artists working in marble. When she met Anne-Claire they instantly clicked, and embarked on a collaboration with Gail’s photographic collage technique. Gail likes to enter the world of the artist and elaborate on their process, creating more of an impression of the artist's work rather than its ultimate reality.

Anne-Claire tells us how it was working with Gail and how happy she was to have Icarus flying.

brass coloured metal sculpture of a figure

Anne-Claire van den Elshout, Rise of Icarus. Photo: Gail Skoff

woman standing in ocean surf at sunset

Anne-Claire van den Elshout. Photo: Gail Skoff

woman standing in ocean at sunset holding above her head a metal sculpture

Anne-Claire van den Elshout, The Rise of Icarus. Photomontage: Gail Skoff

From her childhood, Anne-Claire was inspired by how Michelangelo expressed such soft emotions in hard marble. Below is a piece in tribute to him. Anne-Claire thought David’s victory over Goliath was an excellent metaphor for our battle and the optimism needed to succeed during COVID-19.

3D print of Michelangelo's David with a facemask made of thick metal wire

Anne-Claire van den Elshout, COVID-19: Tribute to Michelangelo. Photo: Nicola Gnesi

anneclaire.nl

instagram.com/anneclairevandenelshout

ArtAxlab aims to build a bridge between the artisan world and digital technologies

artaxlab.com

instagram.com/artaxlab

Credits

Thanks to Gail Skoff for collaborating on this episode and for the fantastic photographs.

Gail Skoff, gailskoff.cominstagram.com/skoffupclose

Producer: Sarah Monk

Producer/editor: Mike Axinn

Thanks to Mike also for narrating Claudio's words.

Music: courtesy of Audio Network

  • Interpretations 3931/2, Igor Dvorkin (PRS), Ellie Kidd (PRS), Duncan Pittock (PRS)

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