When on the hunt for bronze, lead or stainless steel for one of their large-scale creations, Gavin Turk, Anish Kapoor and Marc Quinn turn to the southeast London specialist AB Fine Art Foundry. “We are facilitators and custodians of a craft that is thousands of years old,” says manager Jerry Hughes. “It needs to be kept and passed on. Most of our staff have been to art college. They empathize and are passionate about what they do.” The industrious premises of the respected craftsmen are documented here by French photographer Franck Sauvaire. Taking a tour of the foundry, he uncovered pots and pans flowing with molten wax, as well as objects being covered in yellow silica to be burned at 1000 degrees. A nearly-completed sculpture by Jake and Dinos Chapman, “The same thing only smaller, or the same size but a long way away”, sits in one corner while a segment of Bill Woodrow’s “Sitting on History” is waiting to go into the kiln. All around, men and women in protective boiler suits strive to help create objects of wonder. According to Hughes, the Cuban artist Yoan Capote recently went to a Gavin Turk show and the first thing he thought was, “I want to know where this work was made.” The answer: the magic happened here.