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In the footsteps of Michelangelo
Country Life UK
|July 16, 2025
At his studio fringed by the mountains of Klosters, Swiss sculptor Christian Bolt is feverishly cooking up recipes to re-create terra secca, a material used in Renaissance Italy, not only to expand his own artistic horizons, but to help save the planet

ATORSO by Michelangelo baffled Swiss sculptor Christian Bolt. He had stumbled upon it at the Accademia delle Arti del Disegno in Florence, Italy, where he is a professor. The institution, which protects the cultural inheritance of the Italian Renaissance, was looking after the maquette for an aristocratic Florentine family and Prof Bolt was mesmerised by the material of which it was made: ‘This was not terracotta, marble or bronze—this was something beyond,’ he recalls. That's how he discovered terra secca, ‘a very old technique from the Renaissance’. His interest piqued, he toured Florentine museums and found, at the Bargello, several terra-secca maquettes by Giambologna, as well as Michelangelo: ‘I [became] very, very fascinated by the expression and the language that comes forth through this material.’

He has since joined forces with ETH to try to recreate
This story is from the July 16, 2025 edition of Country Life UK.
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