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How Do You Make A Sculpture Of A Duck?

Sculptor making a sculpture

Question: How do you make a sculpture of a duck?

Answer:

  1. Take a lump of stone, marble, granite, etc. The choice is yours.
  2. Get a hammer and chisel.
  3. In your mind, imagine an image of a duck.
  4. Remove everything from the stone that’s not part of the duck.

Certainly, the form of a duck exists within the stone. However you could also say the form of a horse is in there somewhere. There’s also a tree, dolphin or 1001 other possibilities.

Theoretically, a sculptor could exhibit a bunch of untouched stones and say that each one is a sculpture in beta form, though I doubt that they’d be around very long…

Removing The Unnecessary To Leave The Essential

Sculpting is less about creation and more about removal. The removal of the unnecessary, so that the necessary may be exposed.

Of course for non-sculptors like me (and probably you) that’s easier said than done. It’s difficult to see where the sculpture ends and the detritus begins. Yet the process of removing every element of the unnecessary is absolutely crucial in order for everyone else to be able to understand the meaning. Less is most definitely more.

Just as a sculptor chips away at removing all that gets in the way of communicating her message (i.e. the duck), so your marketing must chip away at all the non-essential information preventing your audience from consuming and ingesting your content as quickly and as efficiently as possible.

Sculptors spend countless hours/days/months/years deliberating, tweaking, and honing to get to the essence of what they want to communicate.

As Picasso once said, “Art is the elimination of the unnecessary”.

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