Relaxing with wax: Meet the Slovak 'Monsieur Tussaud' - GulfToday

Relaxing with wax: Meet the Slovak 'Monsieur Tussaud'

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Roman Bajzik (48) works on a wax figurine of Empress Elisabeth of Austria.

The bald head of Slovak general Milan Rastislav Stefanik is pierced before hairs are inserted into his skull. Stefanik's face remains motionless, his blue eyes do not even blink.

The late founder of the former Czechoslovakia is the latest figure to get the wax treatment from Roman Bajzik, a 48-year-old opera teacher who moonlights as Slovakia's very own Monsieur Tussaud.

"I began creating wax sculptures back in 2002 as I wanted to see what my great-grandfather looked like," Bajzik said, at his two-room gallery in what was once the family mill.

Two decades later, there are now 23 motionless family members, royalty, folklore characters and important figures for tourists and schoolchildren to view.

Roman Bajzik (48) fixes a head of wax figurine of Emperor Franz Joseph in Bajzikov mlyn (Bajzik's mill) in Zavada.

Roman Bajzik (48) fixes a head of wax figurine of Pope John Paul II.

An exhibition of wax figurines by Roman Bajzik in Bajzikov mlyn (Bajzik's mill).

A wax figurine of Pope John Paul II by Roman Bajzik is on display.

'Mute'

An experienced tenor who once sang at Austria's prestigious Salzburg Festival, Bajzik studied opera directing and now teaches operatic acting at the state conservatory in Bratislava.

He likes silence when he sculpts though, usually at night to relax.

"I have enough singing during the day. I'm pleased to be surrounded by my mute figures," he said.

He lives alone in a high-rise flat in the capital where he has turned one room into a tiny studio whose shelves are filled with chicken mesh, cornstarch, construction foam, silica gel -- all used for wax modelling.

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Empress Elisabeth of Austria, better known as Sissi, is undergoing some facial work.

'Lend a hand'

Wax is ideal for models because it looks similar to human skin, said Bajzik, whose mix notably includes beeswax and paraffin.

"It has to be carefully blended as wax tends to crack when inserting hairs into the skull," he said.

Bajzik often transforms everyday items into the props he needs. When one of his kings required an imperial orb, Bajzik bought a Christmas bauble and added a small cross.

He opens a drawer full of semi-finished hands, waiting for their turn to become the appendages of a king or queen.

"Hands are finicky. I usually ask someone to 'lend a hand' and I mold it for a figure," Bajzik said.

"John Paul II, for example, has my hands."

Agence France-Presse

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