Bruno Walpoth can practically turn wood into flesh.
The Italian artist has a knack for creating haunting, incredibly lifelike sculptures hewn out of wood. His works somehow manage to capture the expressiveness in a person's eyes and the body's fleshy curves.
(Story continues below.)
Walpoth told The Huffington Post in an email this week that wood basically runs in his veins. "In our valley there is a 400-year-old tradition of wood-sculpting culture," he wrote in German. "Both my grandfather and my uncle were wood sculptors, and so I grew up with this medium."
He added, however, that wood is "very hard to work with," and it takes a "great delicacy" to make the material "appear like skin." He says it takes him about two months to complete a life-sized figure.
Scroll down to see more of Walpoth's sculptures. Visit his website for more.
The Italian artist has a knack for creating haunting, incredibly lifelike sculptures hewn out of wood. His works somehow manage to capture the expressiveness in a person's eyes and the body's fleshy curves.
(Story continues below.)
Walpoth told The Huffington Post in an email this week that wood basically runs in his veins. "In our valley there is a 400-year-old tradition of wood-sculpting culture," he wrote in German. "Both my grandfather and my uncle were wood sculptors, and so I grew up with this medium."
He added, however, that wood is "very hard to work with," and it takes a "great delicacy" to make the material "appear like skin." He says it takes him about two months to complete a life-sized figure.
Scroll down to see more of Walpoth's sculptures. Visit his website for more.