Sculpture Residency
in Tuscany

May 2-May 9, 2026

Sculpture Immersion with
Romolo Del Deo

in Villa Casone D’Arte
May 2-May 9, 2026

Villa Casone d’Arte offers a rare opportunity to reside and work within the private estate of master sculptor Romolo Del Deo, set amid the historic hills of Tuscany overlooking the Tyrrhenian Sea.

The seventeen-hectare property traces its origins to 778 AD, with the present villa reconstructed in 1678. In the 1960s, the artist Rosario Murabito transformed the estate into a unified work of art for the Contessa Ottolenghi, integrating sculpture, architecture, and landscape. In 2024, Tatiana and Romolo Del Deo undertook a careful restoration of the villa as an artist’s home, devoted to art, beauty, and la dolce vita. You are now invited to experience this inspiration firsthand.

The Residency

This seven-day sculptural immersion is conceived as a residency rather than a course. Participants engage in five sessions of direct wax sculpting, following methods employed by Italian masters since the Renaissance.

it is best suited to individuals with curiosity about artistic process and a desire to explore their creativity in an idyllic setting.

Each participant will complete an original sculptural work prepared for the lost-wax bronze casting process. Those wishing to continue may apply to a subsequent program dedicated to bronze casting from their work.

Instruction is led personally by Romolo Del Deo and combines demonstration, guided creating, and individual critique within the working atelier of the villa.

“Live Art. Experience studying art the way it was meant to be.”

— Romolo Del Deo

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About Romolo Del Deo

Creating

Romolo Del Deo works at the intersection of archaeological memories and contemporary spaces.


Formed through rigorous classical training and long study of ancient materials culture, his sculpture engages the human form as a vessel of time. Rather than reconstructing the past, he places his art into the present, allowing it to exist within our lived environments.


His work has been presented and awarded in most of the major art capitals of the West, yet it remains grounded in studio discipline and direct encounter with material.


For Romolo, sculpture is an invitation to connect what has endured with what is still becoming.

Pictured: Romolo works on his monumental sculpture for the Venice Art Biennial 22

Training

Studio Romolo Atelier is lead by artist and master sculptor, Romolo Del Deo.
He is the founder of the Long Art Movement which is the cornerstone of his teaching method. His training includes degrees from Harvard Univeristy (AB 82) and L’Accademia di Belle Arti di Firenze as well as in the studios of masters in the US and Italy.

Teaching

His teaching methods have received the Harvard-Danforth Award for Excellence in Education and the President’s Award for Contributions to the Arts.

He has served on the faculty of Harvard University, The London Academy of Art, The Provincetown Art Association Museum and the Truro Center for the Arts as well as founding his own studio school, Studio Romolo Atelier, in Italy and the USA to teach his methods.

Sculpting in Direct Wax

The method of working directly in wax to produce works capable of being cast in bronze: Sculpting in wax offers a lightweight flexible and adaptable material to express fluid ideas in form. Direct wax lets the artist work in three dimensions with freedom from cumbersome armatures and avoids the costs of molds in bronze casting.