Talk:Digital sculpture

The initial article has been deleted due to missing references and reverted back to the redirect to 3D computer graphics I can double the earlier statement below as I see a huge difference between 3D computer graphics (current redirect) and a digital sculpture. I changed the redirect to digital sculpting (one of a variety of different techniques to create a digital sculpture):

Here are additional sources on the term Digital Sculpture: Focus mankind (talk) 23:00, 8 August 2021 (UTC)
 * The term 'Digital Sculpture' has been used in the referred project already back in 2013: http://www.digitalsculpture.org - an archeological project supported by universities.
 * Christian Lavigne article 'Sculpture numerique', 1998 https://www.academia.edu/1273386/La_sculpture_num%C3%A9rique
 * The Museum Ulm hosted competionion & exhibitions on 'Digital Sculpture' in 2018: Link: https://museumulm.de/en/exhibition/digital-sculpture-follow-the-unknown/
 * Museum Ulm & the Private Hochschule für Kommunikation und Gestaltung, Ulm published a book on the topic: https://dcv-books.com/en/produkt/digital-sculpture-follow-the-unknown/
 * The German Wikipedia has the German Term (referred in the initial article)

________ I really think this needs a separate article 3D graphics misses the mark on many fronts like much of the current sculpting software and commercial art practices.

There's also an interesting intersection between digital painters and sculptors with 3D sculpted images being able to be printed 2D and 3D with. And 2D artists using 3D software to pose characters that are then painted flat.

Artist Ray Caesar uses 3D software but his digital prints up to now are all 2D Giclée.