Digital Sculpting
Digital Artifacts
Advanced 3D scanning technology is used to capture a diverse range of artifacts, from ancient sculptures to objects shaped by contemporary events like the war in Ukraine. This process provides a digital preservation that safeguards not only the physical form of these pieces but also their historical and cultural essence, ensuring accessibility for future generations.
The approach goes beyond technical replication; it serves as a symbolic bridge between past and present. Each scan becomes more than a mere replica, creating a dialogue between the original stories embedded within these artifacts and the new narratives they are invited to join, preserving them in a modern, enduring form
Fragments of reality, 2024
3D scan of a car captured on-site in Ukraine by the local people
Fragments of reality, 2024
Light test
Giuseppe Lo Schiavo, Apollo and the Ocean, 2023
Fine art print on cotton paper
148,5×110 cm, Ed. of 7+2 AP
Two different 3D scans from the original casts of the ancient Chiaramonti Niobid statue from the Statens Museum for Kunst were fused together to create a complete figure.
Giuseppe Lo Schiavo, Niobide, 2022,
Fine art print on cotton paper
148,5×110 cm, Ed. of 7+2 AP
Giuseppe Lo Schiavo, Venus A, 2022
Fine art print on cotton paper
67,5×50 cm / 90x120cm, Ed. of 7+2
Giuseppe Lo Schiavo, Venus B, 2022
Fine art print on cotton paper
37,5×50 cm / 90×120 cm Ed. of 7+2 AP
3D SCAN DETAILS
Title: From a statue of Diskoforos
Accession: KAS905
Artist: Polykleitos
Place: SMK – Statens Museum for Kunst