My Turn

July 17, 2007

Ether-net connections

Since I’ve been doing the blog, I often receive emails from strangers who are reading the blog but don’t feel comfortable making public comments. I received such an email today, and after I read it, I was idly looking at the sender’s name and noticed that the email address was from Hawaii. Hmm, I thought, didn’t I know a girl in junior high with the same name who had lived in Hawaii before and loved it? Could she have moved back to Hawaii later? No way, I thought. No, no possible way. I began to tremble. My mind was reeling.

I Googled her name. I couldn’t find a photo of her, but I found that she was of Scottish-Irish heritage, and that clicked. 

I composed a reply, thanking her for reading my blog, etc., and then asked if perhaps she might possibly have lived in Virginia as a teenager way back when. The answer came back in minutes: Oh man, Lynne!!!!!! I wondered what happened to you!!

We were thirteen years old, people. Thirty-seven—count them—years ago. I lived there for only five and a half months, and we didn’t even attend the same school. But, however briefly, we were close, and the memories stuck. We exchanged numbers and the phone rang and her voice was the same and she said mine was the same and I had the same laugh and I couldn’t stop laughing. And we’re both professional turners now and what a way to reconnect! I’m still smiling and shaking my head.

Bless Al Gore for inventing the Internet.

Monday, July 16

International Turning Exchange  •  12:26 am  

Here I am blogging about our day on the same day. Except for filling in some text, that means I’m caught up. Hallelujah!

We rearranged the shop today. Or, rather, mostly Jean-François and Sean rearranged the shop, changing spots so that we can better take advantage of the natural light. Here is how the shop looks now. What you see when you walk in is still my area, but with the wall behind the workbench gone. Beyond me (to the right in the photo) is now Jean-François’s work area.

Entering the shop.

Looking more to the right, you see this. The bench with our shared tools is behind the post.

The center of the room.

Here is a closer view of Jean-François’s new work area. He gets direct light from the window on his work when he is turning outboard.

Jean-François's new work space.

Looking farther right, you see Siegfried’s corner. We cleared space in the back area for Lesya to dance in on community day. Siegfried may move his lathe back into that space after Lesya leaves us this week.

 Siegfried's corner.

And, finally, as you look all the way right, across from my area and behind the entryway wall is Sean’s new work area.

Sean's new work space.

Because she was ill most of last week, Lesya is still with us this week. She is developing dances for one piece from each of us, and Vince Romaniello, the videographer from last year’s ITE, will be filming her for screening at the opening, which she cannot attend. She will also help carve and texture some of the waves for the wave collaboration.

Lesya rearranges the waves.

Siegfried, whose work I have neglected in recent days, has started the carving and texturing. I will do some carving and maybe some coloring later. Elisabeth may come by and do some too. (Are you reading this, Elisabeth?)

Siegfried carves the waves.

Some of the carved waves.

Here are some of the other pieces I’ve failed to adequately document recently. Siegfried’s collaboration with Peter has two deep, thin-walled box elder bowls suspended on cables in a concrete-and-walnut structure. The cable on the left bows out, so the bowl leans out of the structure. The concrete still needs to be sealed, but otherwise this piece is done.

Siegfried's collaboration with Peter.

Here is Siegfried’s thin-walled concrete bowl. Antique-brown wax has been applied to the surface.

Siegfried's cement bowl.Another view of Siegfried's cement bowl.

 Jean-François’s thin-walled cement bowl is quite different.

Jean-François's cement bowl.

Jean-François took these pictures of his three-bowl Chinese elm series while I closed in on the tail of the blog.

Jean-François's Chinese elm series.

Closeup of Jean-François's Chinese elm bowls.

Sean has been productive recently too. These are the latest incarnations of familiar pieces.

Sean's 'holey man' sculpture.Another of Sean's sculptures.

A finished sculpture.The other side.

These are some pieces I hadn’t seen before.

New work by Sean.

Another sculpture.The other side.

Now that I’m catching up on the blog, I get to turn too! Here is a small barkless-natural-edge sycamore bowl that I began during community day. I have pierced tiny holes near the rim. I may do more after I sit with it a bit.

A small, carved sycamore bowl.

This is a very simple new bowl I turned all but the base of today. Jean-François and I will use it in a collaboration.

End-grain sycamore bowl.

July 16, 2007

A day of goodbyes (Sunday, July 15)

International Turning Exchange  •  8:07 pm  

Peter and Elisabeth left us yesterday.

Here’s a look at some of the breakthrough work Peter has done during the ITE. First the wearable line (and a couple of wall pieces). Judging from the response to these pieces, Peter will be able to sell all he chooses to make. If you want one, you had better make it to the preview show August 3.

Two small wall pieces and some cable-and-wood necklaces.

More cable-and-wood necklaces.

Cast cement water bottles. What was he trying to say by leaving them capless? (In truth, these are pretty cool. The cement actually feels like plastic.)

Cement water bottles.

You’ve seen this piece in the blog before, but I think he decided to make it horizontal instead. Again, these are forms Peter has used to cast pieces for his furniture. The concrete darkens the form wherever it contacts it.

Wall hanging of used cast forms.

Peter had time for a last lunch with Siegfried and me before he managed to get packed up and on the road.

Elisabeth, on the other hand, just came in to say goodbye and sign her bowl, her first turned work, a mortar made of pear.

Elisabeth signs her mortar.

Elisabeth's mortar.

Elisabeth's arrangement of the waves.

And saddest of all . . . Hilary’s cookies are all gone.

Hilary's empty cookie tin.

Thank you, Hilary, for hearing—and answering—our silent prayer in our hour of need.

Dinner with the LeCoffs (Saturday, July 14)

International Turning Exchange  •  7:46 pm  

We all went to Albert and Tina’s for dinner after community day. Everyone was a little punchy after our long day, and it was nice to relax together. In truth, I was focused on dinner and hadn’t even thought about the collection we would be seeing. Doh. Of course, they would have their pick of work from practically any wood artist in the world. It’s a good thing I downloaded photos from community day and recharged my camera in between, or I would have been kicking myself and begging for a return visit. 

In the LeCoffs' living room.

In the LeCoffs' living room.

In the LeCoffs' living room.

In the LeCoffs' living room.

Lacquerware (and more) in the LeCoffs' living room.

Albert tried to get us to guess what artist made the print above the mantel, and we came up dry. Can any of you guess? Robyn Horn. Yes, that Robyn Horn.

The LeCoffs' mantel. 

I think the name of this ceramic artist is Siminski, but I’ll have to verify it. And the piece of furniture it’s displayed on is by some guy I just recently heard of—Peter Harrison, I think his name is—back in the days when he still occasionally turned.

An early Peter Harrison work.

We had a finger-lickin’ dinner of barbecued ribs and chicken, libations, and good cheer.

Cheers!

And then we went upstairs and looked at more work. These are the two “Japanese” bowls Albert and Tina brought back from AAW this year. The bowl on the left is by Michael Werner; the one on the right, by Merryll Saylan.

New acquisitions from the AAW Japanese bowl show.

I so want a television stand like this one . . .

Not an Ikea TV stand.

Jean-François, Siegfried, and Elisabeth check out a piece.

Albert modeled this collapsible helmet for us.

I thought Albert was drinking water at dinner . . .

And when we went down to dessert, we slipped gifts onto their plates: a necklace and a bolo tie, both made by Peter and Jean-François.

Albert and Tina show off their newest acquisitions.

Community day (Saturday, July 14)

International Turning Exchange  •  1:51 am  

Community day began with a little dance from Jean-François, perhaps shaking out the jitters before the crowd arrived.

Jean-François dances. 

The event seemed to attract a good crowd of interested visitors. ’Round about noon, the shop was downright crowded. People watched us work, asked questions, looked at our work, and generally seemed to enjoy meeting us. The lunch catered by Paolo’s was pretty good too. 

Sean talks about his work with visitors.

Siegfried demonstrated his skills.

Jean-François used vinegar and fire to draw a crowd.

A few people even wanted to talk with Peter and Elisabeth.

Peter talks with Sheryl and Tim Kochman.

Elisabeth discusses her experience with a visitor.

After lunch, I gave a private lesson in sanding to Elisabeth’s daughter Gianna.

Gianna learns to sand on the lathe.

And throughout the day, Lesya danced, first (and several times) with Sean’s piece, for which she had prepared.

Lesya dances to Sean's sculpture.

Lesya dances to Sean's sculpture.

Lesya dances to Sean's sculpture.

Lesya dances to Sean's sculpture.

And then, spontaneously, with mine. I was moved.

Lesya dances with my vessel.Lesya dances with my vessel.

Composite photo of the audience watching Lesya dance.

After everyone had gone, we did a little spontaneous celebrating.

Jean-François's designer Chinese elm hats.

Elisabeth and I helped Siegfried finalize the position of his vessels in his collaborative piece with Peter, which inspired Elisabeth to dance.

Elisabeth dances.

Elisabeth dances.

And Jean-François worked a little too, turning and decorating wood elements for Peter’s cable-and-wood jewelry line.

Jean-François chars a necklace piece.

Afterward, we all went to Albert and Tina’s house for dinner. That will be a long entry with a lot of photos, so it will have to wait for daylight.

July 15, 2007

Friday, July 13

Siegfried had cast a thin cement bowl with Peter the previous day, using Styrofoam for the form and cement fortified with acrylic “milk,” and it was ready to be opened. Peter used lacquer thinner to dissolve the Styrofoam. It doesn’t dissolve it cleanly, as I had expected; it makes quite a sticky goo, so be prepared if you try this at home. I need to remember to photograph and post the finished bowl. As you can see from the final photo in this sequence, it is nice and thin.

Using lacquer thinner to dissolve the Styrofoam.

Opening the form.

Trying to remove the center form.

Siegfried watches Peter extract his bowl.

Removing the exterior form.

Having established an exterior shape she was pleased with, Elisabeth progressed to hollowing her bowl, which will be a mortar that she plans to use in her own kitchen.

Elisabeth hollows her first bowl.

Jean-François turned a Styrofoam form for his own thin cement bowl, of a conical shape.

Jean-François turns a Styrofoam form.

The following day, Saturday, was to be community day, with the shop open to visitors, so we stopped at around 3 p.m. to meet and plan our open-shop activities. Jean-François cleaned himself up a little for the meeting.

Jean-François blows out the shavings.

Siegfried brought a cheesecake to grease the discussion.

Siegfried cuts a cheesecake.

We decided to each do our own thing and let questions and the interests of visitors determine the flow of our activities. After the meeting, we took a few hours to clean the shop up, shoveling and sweeping shavings, clearing space for Lesya to dance in, tidying up our benches, etc. And Tina came with Jessica from the Wood Turning Center to deliver beverages, books, and T shirts in preparation for the next day. 

Thursday, July 12

International Turning Exchange  •  10:15 pm  

I finally burned the shavings out of my cement experiment. The outer shape didn’t work out, but I like the interior. 

I burn the shavings from my cement experiment.

Jean-François wasn’t quite fully back on his feet yet, but that didn’t stop him from turning. He continued work on his Chinese elm bowls.

Jean-François sits to turn.

Peter opened one face of his poured form to see how it was setting. (This photo was taken before he opened it.)

 Peter's form.

Mark Sfirri came by for a visit and also showed us two wonderful slide presentations: one on the Canadian turner Stephen Hogbin, the other on Wharton Esherick.

Mark and Elisabeth look at Jean-François's work.

Mark talks with Peter and Siegfried.

While everyone else was out of the shop for lunch, Jane and I decided that, with one face removed, Peter’s poured concrete form looked like a fireplace. We decided to light a fire in it and put some art on the mantel.

The concrete fireplace.

Jane caught me posing badly.

Aristocrat leaning on the mantel? Not.

And when the group came back from lunch, almost everyone wanted to pose for a portrait.

Jean-François warms his feet.

Elisabeth reads The Woodturner's Bible.

Mark warms his hands.

So does Siegfried.

Jane warms her tush.

Afterward, Elisabeth continued her turning lessons with me. I’ve decided to hire her as my stunt double.

Elisabeth begins to turn her very first piece. 

I have neglected Siegfried over the last couple of days and don’t have photos, but today he turned Styroform forms and poured a thin cement bowl with Peter, and he has been finishing the vessels for his collaborative piece with Peter. 

Despite the fun of the fireplace, I badly needed to blow off steam this night, so I had a riotous night out with Jane and Co. in Old City, at the end of which I purchased the lovely glasses you have already seen. Too much blah blah blog and not enough play can make Lynne a very tense girl.

Wednesday, July 11

International Turning Exchange  •  9:53 pm  

After we returned from our visit to the Esherick Museum and Brad Smith, we were eager to get to work. The first order of business was opening Jane’s form to see how her experimental concrete table leg came out. Check out the nice wood grain pattern left by the plywood form.

Jane's experimental concrete table leg.

Jean-François set about screening the red dirt he collected at Brad Smith’s.

Jean-François screens dirt.

 Sean returned to carving.

Sean carves a new piece.

Jean-François then began to exact his revenge on the Chinese elm log that broke his toe. He turned it,

Jean-François's elm bowl.

textured it on multiple centers, then burned it.

Off-center texturing.Burning.

I caught Peter (“I don’t turn anymore”) on the lathe, where he was turning elements to use in casting a base for his collaboration with Siegfried. Below, he is positioning the turned elements on part of the form, then assembling the form. The turned elements will allow cables to be attached after the concrete has set.

Busted!

Peter assembles the form.

Peter used threaded rod for reinforcement inside the form, attaching them to the turned elements and to vertical rods in the uprights.

Threaded rods used as reinforcement inside the form.

Peter mixes the concrete.

Peter taps the almost-full form to even the concrete and release bubbles.

Brad Smith’s studio (Wednesday, July 11)

International Turning Exchange, Tools  •  4:05 pm  

On the way back from the Esherick Museum, we stopped by the studio of a furniture maker that Peter knows, Brad Smith, of Bradford Woodworking. He makes furniture from turned axe handles, croquet mallet handles, pitchforks, and more, and he has two 100-year-old-plus lathes to do his turning.

 Stacked stools and bedposts.

Detail of pitchfork bench.

Pitchfork tables.

This belt-driven lathe duplicates the form installed in the foreground. By using a set of dado blades as the cutter, Brad gets the ridge pattern characteristic of the axe handles he uses in his furniture.

Turning axe handles.

The axe handle being turned.

As we were preparing to leave Brad’s place, Jean-François noticed the red dirt bared by an excavator and collected some to try in a finish.

Jean-Françoiso collects some red dirt.

Wharton Esherick Museum (Wednesday, July 11)

International Turning Exchange  •  4:05 pm  

We visited the Wharton Esherick Museum in Paoli, PA, on Wednesday. If you don’t know who Wharton Esherick, “Dean of American Craftsmen,” is, get thee to Google and learn all you can. I’m about out of words, so (for now at least) I’m going to leave it to you to find out about the images shown below.

Esherick's studio.

The beams for the roof of the garage shown below were badly warped, so instead of scrapping them or trying to straighten them, he split them and used the curve in forming the roof.

Garage with hyperbolic paraboloid roof.

Bench, music stand, and stools.

Paul shows us the hammer handle chair.

The famous staircase.

Sculpture.

'The Kiss.'

Horse sculpture.

Sconce and maquette.

Library stool.

'The Opera Singer.'

After the tour, we had a lovely lunch with Rob Leonard, the museum director, and Paul, our guide, out on the deck. Paul had to leave and, no doubt out of habit, locked the deck door behind him, leaving us stranded out on the deck. Rob was ready to leap to our rescue, but even six-foot-five Peter balked at the drop to the stairs below. Fortunately, reason prevailed, and Rob had Elisabeth use her cell phone to call Esherick’s daughter and son-in-law, who live on the property, to come release us.

Rob to the rescue.Rob to the rescue.

That’s Rob Leonard in the back row behind Siegfried.

In front of the studio with Rob.

July 13, 2007

Tuesday, July 10

International Turning Exchange  •  10:10 pm  

This was our one day back in the shop between trips, and it was a long one.

As I noted in a previous post, Elisabeth and Lesya both got turning lessons, Elisabeth from Siegfried first, and both of them from me later (with good advice from Jean-François). I didn’t get to photograph Lesya turning, because I was busy teaching her, but she managed to play around a little with beads and coves.

Siegfried gives Elisabeth a turning lesson.

Elisabeth also just spent some time with us individually and collectively and got to know each of us a little more.

Lesya chose one piece from Sean (what I’ve been calling “the mascot”) and my multiaxis cherry bowl as focal points from which to begin developing dances. I took multiple photos of the two pieces and printed them out for her to take with her.

Jean-François, who is unable to stand for long periods and so not yet able to turn, experimented with new finishes involving sand and gesso and other various coatings.

Jean-François experiments with finishes.

Siegfried got the vacuum chuck up and running with a foot switch he had his wife send him from home, and he worked on finishing the large vessels he turned first. Sean continued to carve various pieces. Peter worked on building a form for a collaborative piece with Siegfried. He also helped Jane develop and pour a form for a table she is making (we get everyone working here). I worked on a new honey locust bowl with a textured exterior and helped Jane a little (mostly as supervisor) with her table.

Jane builds a concrete form.

The wire mesh suspended in Jane's form.

Mixing the concrete.

Beginning the pour.

Peter taps to release bubbles.

A visit with Bruce Kaiser (Monday, July 9)

International Turning Exchange  •  2:45 pm  

Text to come.

Kitchen utensils.

The first room we visited.

One dining room.

Another dining room.

A third dining room.

The Kaisers' mantelpiece.

In the Kaisers' living room.

Another view of the living room shelves.

I-beam sculpture.

Dinner with Bruce Kaiser.

A visit to the Kayes (Monday, July 9)

International Turning Exchange  •  2:35 pm  

Text to come.

A George Peterson piece in the Kayes' sunroom.

Helicopter rotor coffee table with wood bowl.

The Kayes' mantelpiece.

A kinetic sculpture by George Rhoads.

Bandsaw sculpture in the Kayes' kitchen.

Detail of a carved Alaskan soapstone sculpture in the Kayes kitchen.

In the office.

Neil Kaye tells us about a piece.

What all this blogging is doing to me . . .

International Turning Exchange  •  9:03 am  

The blogger enters a manic phase trying to keep up with all the happenings.

Winterthur (Monday, July 9)

International Turning Exchange  •  1:32 am  

Text to come.

Workbench in the Dominy workshop.

Pole lathe in the Dominy workshop.

Great wheel lathe in the Dominy workshop.

Closeup of the headstock of the great wheel lathe.

Closeup showing how the piece is held on the lathe.

The great wheel.

Closeup of the great wheel.

Lathe tools and a turned bowl.

Charles Hummel tells us about the great wheel lathe.

Metal lathe in the clock-making shop.

Gear-cutting jig.

Miniature lathe in a box.

Group meeting and dinner (Sunday, July 8)

International Turning Exchange  •  1:25 am  

After our visit to Mark Sfirri’s and David Ellsworth’s studios, we went back to the shop to meet with Albert and Tina and to meet Lesya Popil, our dancer, for the first time. Left to right, we are: Sean, Albert, Elisabeth, Siegfried, me, Peter, and Lesya. Tina took the photo. Jean-François was back at the dorm nursing his broken toe.

Group meeting at the shop.

We spent a little time individually acquainting Elisabeth and Lesya with our work, then Albert and Tina took us out to dinner at a diner near the airport (the name escapes me at the moment).

David Ellsworth’s home and studio (Sunday, July 8)

International Turning Exchange  •  1:23 am  

Text to come.

David talks with Elisabeth about one of his pieces.

David's staircase.

An assortment of work by David and fellow turners.

David's studio.

One of David's lathes.

David talks with Elisabeth about more work.

Mark Sfirri’s studio and home (Sunday, July 8)

Mark has a Oneway with two bed extensions, allowing him to turn pieces up to 13 feet long. The farthest extension runs under the table in the background.

Mark's lathe.

Mark does a lot of off-center and inside-out turning. Here is a sample he has turned with the two halves still joined. For those who don’t know, inside-out turning involves joining two pieces of wood, turning them, separating them, reversing them by putting the two outside faces together, rejoining the pieces, and turning them again. Mark further complicates the shape by offsetting the centers he uses to turn each face.

Sample of off-center, inside-out turning.Another view of the sample.

Mark is also well known for turning pieces that appear to be bent. This is an example of the blank he uses to turn such shapes, next to the kind of shape it will yield. The trick is to cut the blank and mount it as shown in the second photo below.

Blank and turned 'bent' form.

The mounted, spinning blank.

Mark keeps on hand a lot of samples to help him recreate forms.

Some of Mark's samples.

Mark showed us how he uses a mirror to simulate the absent opposite leg of a model for a piece of furniture.

Mark uses a mirror to simulate the opposite leg of a model. 

Mark has many beautiful turned and other wood art works in his home, some his own work, others by fellow turners and furniture makers.

A collaboration between Mark and artist Brooke Schmidt.

One of Mark's famous bats.

An assortment of work by Mark and many others.

The highlight of our visit was a fruit salad Mark made for us, a creation for which he seems to be known. He told us that one year he had a card made with a photo of such a salad (but even more elaborate), clearly identified as a “kitchen creation,” and sent it out. The first five or so recipients called him asking him about the availability of the piece, assuming it was wood! He says he wishes he could create a piece that looked so realistic!

Mark's fruit salad.

The salad was very refreshing, perfect for a steamy summer day. Peter, of course, couldn’t resist playing with his plate.

Peter's arrangement of his fruit salad.

Long-awaited photos of Jean-François at the emergency room

International Turning Exchange  •  12:13 am  

Peter took these pictures when he accompanied Jean-François (“Jean Francis,” the E.R. personnel kept calling, but no one would respond) to the emergency room. To read the captions, just hover the mouse over each photo. 

The injured appendage.

Jean-François gets a new shoe.

He doesn't appear to be in pain . . .

Time check: 2:25 a.m.

Jean-François takes aim with his new crutch.

Catching up

International Turning Exchange  •  12:01 am  

Well, I am doing my best to catch up, but I suspect it will take me a few days, especially because tomorrow we need to prepare for an open house at the woodshop on Saturday, when anyone who wants to can visit us at work and meet us and see what we have been doing. So I will be adding groups of photos from the past few days as I can; these may be interspersed with more-current photos, so posts may be jumping back and forth chronologically until I do get caught up. Please be patient and try to keep it all straight.

July 11, 2007

The past few days

International Turning Exchange  •  8:36 am  

These past few days have been jam-packed, but I’m too tired to do a full post, so here is a brief summary. You’ll have to wait for photos.

We nearly lost another resident to the emergency room. Saturday evening, Jean-François narrowly survived a vicious attack from a member of his own clan. He was chainsawing an elm log (his last name, Delorme, means “of the elm” in French), and it split and fell on his foot and broke his left big toe. Peter escorted him to the emergency room, and Jean-François managed to limp out on crutches at around 3 a.m. He stayed behind Sunday on our trip to Mark Sfirri’s and David Ellsworth’s but recovered enough to come with us Monday to Wilmington, where he got to tour Winterthur in a wheelchair in chauffered comfort. He will have his revenge on the elm, though: he will turn a bowl from the log that attacked him.

Our visits to Mark’s and David’s studios were fun. As I noted in my brief last post, Elisabeth accompanied us. She enjoyed having the chance to talk directly with two eminent woodturners (unlike us ITErs) about their work, and we enjoyed seeing their studios, their work (past and present), and the work they have acquired from other turners, and talking with them, of course. We also enjoyed getting to know Elisabeth.

Sunday evening was our first chance to meet Lesya, who seems eager to explore this opportunity with us. She couldn’t accompany all the rest of us to dinner with Albert and Tina that night, but she made it back Tuesday to learn more about our work and to take a turn at the lathe, where she quickly advanced to trying to turn beads and coves.

Elisabeth also tried her hand at turning on Tuesday and proved a ready student, though she admits it is “harder than [she] thought.” We didn’t make it easy for her: no round stock for her, but a still-rough log. She toughed it out, though, till it began to feel comfortable.

But I’m skipping Monday, a long day full of pleasures. We began by visiting Winterthur, accompanied by Charles Hummel, curator emeritus and gentleman extraordinaire. There we got to visit the restored woodshop of the Dominys, a three-generation woodworking family from East Hampton, NY, whose shop dates back to the 1700s. (The shell has been recreated, but the contents are original.) Unlike other visitors to the museum, we were able to enter the shop and see up close the tools and equipment the Dominys used, including a pole lathe and a great wheel lathe. We even got to hold some of the hand tools. And we got to see their clock-making shop as well, which contained two other lathes, one not even six inches long, contained in a box (photos will come!). Get your hands on Charles Hummel’s book With Hammer in Hand: The Dominy Craftsmen of East Hampton, New York to see some of what we experienced. We also got a quick view of Gord Peteran’s exhibition there and managed to see some of the Winterthur period rooms.

After a pleasant lunch with Charlie, we paid a delightful visit to the home of collectors Neil and Susan Kaye. Again, pictures will come. In the meantime, let me just say again how unique each collection is, how each reflects the personalities of the collectors, and what a pleasure it is to witness the joy people take in living in such beauty. The Kayes have many, many wonderful pieces and entertaining stories.

We then were treated to the eyepopping collection of Bruce and Marina Kaiser. What a profusion of art their home contains! To do their collection justice, I will have to borrow some photographs from my fellow residents, as I had very little battery power left after Winterthur and the Kayes. There are pictures, however; have no fear. Bruce (Marina was out of town) then generously took us all (Albert and Tina and Charles Hummel rounded out our party) out to dinner.

Yesterday, we had a long day back in the shop. Elisabeth and Lesya both got turning lessons, Elisabeth from Siegfried first, and both of them from me later (with good advice from Jean-François). Elisabeth got to know everyone a little more. Lesya began working with a couple of our pieces to develop dance works: Sean’s “mascot” sculpture (for which I need to write down the proper title) and my multiaxis cherry bowl, so far. Jean-François, who is unable to stand for long periods and so not yet able to turn, experimented with new finishes involving sand and gesso and other various coatings. Siegfried got the vacuum chuck up and running with a foot switch he had his wife send him from home, and he worked on finishing the large vessels he turned first. Sean continued to carve various pieces. Peter worked on building a form for a collaborative piece with Siegfried. He also helped Jane develop and pour a form for a table she is making (we get everyone working here). I worked on a new honey locust bowl with a textured exterior and helped Jane a little (mostly as supervisor) with her table.

Today, we are off to the Wharton Esherick Museum with a stop afterward at the studio of furniture maker Brad Smith. Perhaps by tomorrow I can have some pictures for you to look at.

July 9, 2007

A brief note . . .

International Turning Exchange  •  8:33 am  

to say catch up with us tomorrow.

Yesterday, Elisabeth Agro, our resident scholar, joined us in a visit to the studios of Mark Sfirri and David Ellsworth. Upon our return, we all met with Albert and Tina, as well as with Lesya Popil, our dancer, to let Elisabeth and Lesya begin to get acquainted with the work we all have been doing.

Today, we head to Wilmington, DE, to visit the Winterthur Museum, and then the homes of collectors Neil and Susan Kaye and Bruce and Marina Kaiser. Stay tuned . . . 

July 7, 2007

Saturday, July 7

International Turning Exchange  •  9:00 pm  

Today, we visited the studio of famed furniture maker George Nakashima in New Hope, PA, where his daughter, Mira, continues to make furniture in the same tradition. Mira began our tour by telling us about her father’s life and work.

Mira Nakashima talks about her father.

The first building we visited was the wood barn, filled with enormous slabs of wood cut from whole trees and stacked together for drying in the sequence in which they were cut from the log. Mira explained the challenges of storing, keeping track of, and accessing the wood, much of which is stored for many years.

The wood barn.

Stacked slabbed trees in the wood barn.

Mira talks to us about the wood.

Many slabs were marked in chalk with customer names, measurements, cut lines, and other information.

A marked slab of wood.

The door of the wood barn.

This dining set was in a residence built by Nakashima in the early 1970s.

A dining set in the so-called bath house, because of its large Japanese bath.

A detail of the dining table.

What is known as the art building is also the home of the Nakashima Foundation for Peace.

Detail of the exterior of the art building.

Chairs in the art building.

The silver appearance of the table edges in this photograph is caused by the camera flash. The edges are actually the dark, barkless natural surface of the trunk.

A table in the art building.

Notice how the concrete wall at the top of the stairs follows the same line as the right edge of the stairs.

The stairs in the art building.

I liked the way the stairs looked viewed sideways just as well.

The stairs viewed sideways.

The loft in the art building held samples of many types of chairs.

Upstairs in the art building.

Jean-François enjoyed speaking French with Kevin Nakashima, who learned it in high school from a native French speaker.

Kevin Nakashima with Jean-François.

The pond outside the showroom had very vocal frogs among the water lilies. I thought their croaking was some sort of squawk from a walkie-talkie until I squatted down and looked.

Frog.

When I chose . . .

My focal image for the ITE. this image to represent my focus for the ITE, I didn’t realize that part of the ITE for me would be about mending brokenness and learning again to value the self that broke.

July 6, 2007

Friday, July 6

The atmosphere in the shop is very playful. Everyone is engaged in a fresh way.

Sean’s work is as unpredictable as ever. This morning he had cut beads into the exterior of the osage orange piece on the lathe. 

Sean's osage orange vessel, now beaded.

Later, this is how the piece had developed: Sean colored the interior bright scarlet. Then he cut the beads nearly apart on the bandsaw and inserted ebony wedges to open up and bend the form. Stay tuned: this piece is still evolving.

The next evolution of Sean's osage orange piece.

This is how far he has come on the first piece he started, the oak ring sculpture. Here, he is holding in position three of the carved pieces. A fourth is not shown.

Sean's oak piece.

Siegfried has turned some deep bowls of box elder in addition to the wave forms he continues work on.

A box elder bowl being turned by Siegfried.

I don’t know, but judging from their shapes, I suspect that these bowls may be intended for a collaboration with Jean-François.

Three vessels by Siegfried.

Peter helped Siegfried out by cutting a stack of poplar for Siegfried to turn into waves.

A stack of cut poplar waits to be turned into waves by Siegfried.

Jean-François turned another form for a new cement vessel. He has textured the interior (for the exterior of the cement bowl) with an Arbortech.

A new mold for a cement bowl.

He also continues with his oak bowl series. Here, he is parting off the second bowl.

Jean-François finishes the second of his recent oak bowls.

Peter manages to get some of his own work done despite spending most of his days helping everyone else. Here is his first wall piece, made from used concrete forms. The oak frame was colored using Jean-François’s vinegar-and-steel-wool technique.

A wall piece by Peter.

While Peter was busy helping others, Jane tried on a few of his honey-locust-and-cable pieces for size. I’m not sure Peter has realized that his work is wearable.

Two wall pieces by Peter displayed as wearable art.

Peter also pitched in to try to repair a dripping air-conditioning unit.

Peter as HVAC repairman.

Then we talked him into doing another master class in cement casting. He added cable segments and glitter (are you paying attention, Hilary?) to this sample.

Peter sets up a cement form.

Pouring the cement.

Jane used a piece of chainsawn honey locust to cast another sample. Siegfried added a wave/whale’s tail.

Another experiment in cement.

I tried my hand at forming a freehand bowl over a pile of shavings.

I tried a freeform bowl.

After removing the first sample from the form, Peter used water and a wire brush to expose the cable before the cement had finished setting.

Exposing the cable in the cast sample.

On the left, you can see the cast chainsawn texture from the second sample. I will burn out the shavings from my sample after the cement has set overnight. I didn’t achieve much of a bowl shape, but it did give me a feel for the process for a more serious attempt.

The pieces we cast.

Jean-François’s third vessel will be a hollow form. To cast the interior, he turned a form from a two-inch block of Styrofoam.

Jean-François turns a form from Styrofoam.

He then suspended the form from a stick using double-stick tape . . .

The assembled form for Jean-François's next cement vessel.

and mixed and poured the cement. This mix is gray, in between the white and black of the first two bowls. Tomorrow, he will use acetone or lacquer thinner to dissolve the Styrofoam form, leaving a void in its place.

The poured vessel.

Thursday, July 5

Yesterday and today were big days for Jean-François. Here is what I found on Jean-François’s workbench this morning.

Jean-François's first cement bowl.Another view of Jean-François's cement bowl.

He has had the idea for cement bowls in his mind for five years now. Beginning yesterday, he is seeing his vision fulfilled.

He proceeded to make a second bowl after a trip to Home Depot for some black cement color. He used the same mold as for the first one, but he altered it by turning and carving some decoration into the forms for this bowl. You can see the horizontal grooves in the outer form, which will become beads on the cement bowl. You can also see some carved facets on the inner form. The inner form is suspended and held in place by screws in the top crosspiece of wood. Oil has been applied to the wood surfaces to aid in releasing the set cement.

Pouring the cement into the mold.

Peter helped him with the whole process. Here, Peter is tapping the outer form to release bubbles from the cement. This doesn’t get rid of all of them, but it reduces their number and perhaps their size.

Tapping out the bubbles.

Then it was a matter of waiting. Finally, after six or so hours, Jean-François and Peter began trying to release the bowl from the mold. Tapping didn’t work, though it had for the first bowl. The texturing of the wood for this second bowl made the release more difficult. Jean-François ended up turning the assemblage (this was easy to do, because the outer form was still mounted on a faceplate), first cutting away most of the inner form, then carefully chiseling the remainder loose. Finally, the remaining form came loose and lifted out.

Chiseling the inner form out.Removing the inner form.

The inside of the new cement bowl.

You can see the grain impressions left by the wood, as well as bubbles that didn’t get released. In the background is the inner form that was removed.

Jean-François also thinned the outer form on the lathe. He and Peter then split what was left of the outer form and peeled it from the cement.

Removing the outer form.Removing the bottom of the outer form.

Jean-François will give what remains of the forms to Sean to use.

What is left of the forms.

The pair of bowls. Jean-François will make a third cement bowl tomorrow.

Jean-François's two cement bowls.

What Jean-François worked on while he waited for the cement to set was this oak bowl and another, to go with the red-and-black one from yesterday. He painted the second one with white acrylic and burned it to blacken the ridges.

Another oak bowl.

When Peter wasn’t working with Jean-François yesterday and today, he was working on wall pieces using blocks of the wood he is using in his bench—which is not cherry but honey locust, everyone agrees—and cable he brought with him from home.

Some of Peter's wall pieces.

More of Peter's wall pieces.

This is an experiment by Peter and Jean-François from yesterday. They formed cement over a pile of chainsaw shavings and then burned the shavings out with a torch. I love the texture and the idea of a freeform cement bowl.

An experiment in cement and shavings.

Working in his own corner, Sean did more carving on the components for his oak sculpture.

Components of Sean's oak sculpture.

He also worked on turning a deep bowl of osage orange.

Sean's osage orange bowl.

Siegfried continued making wave forms for a collaborative piece.

Siegfried turns more inside-out shapes.

As for me, after watching the cement pouring by Jean-François and Peter, and servicing the electric chainsaw with Jane and help from Sean, I started a vessel from an unknown wood with a large split down the side. Tomorrow, Jean-François is going to teach me some texturing techniques with the Arbortech, which I plan to use on this new piece. I also did more carving on the lip of the pear hollow vessel.

July 4, 2007

A small-town American holiday

International Turning Exchange  •  11:04 pm  

Today, Siegfried and I accepted Jane’s invitation to visit Swarthmore, PA, to see how one small town celebrates Independence Day. It was an experience as new to me as it was to Siegfried. We had a delightful time.

We arrived in time for the pet portion of the parade.

One entry in the pet section of the Swarthmore parade.

Next came the small bikes and trikes.

Part of the small bikes and trikes section.

I particularly liked this variation on the tricycle.

He ain't heavy, he's my brother.

The winner of the small bikes and trikes division accepted congratulations and her award from the announcer.

First-place winner for decorated trikes and small bikes.

The larger decorated bicycles followed.

Larger decorated bikes.

The floats waited in the wings while the bicyclists proceeded. The pioneers in front won the float competition. Unfortunately, you can’t quite see here the covered wagon (led by a stuffed horse) that they were pulling.

The floats await their entrance.

Another float headed back down the parade route after the judging.

Another float.

The highlight of the celebration was the demonstration by the volunteer fire fighters.

There was a slight delay when the flare to be used to light the fire couldn’t be lit (is it a bad thing when firefighters have trouble starting a fire?), but once it was, the drama began. First, a fire started on the stove behind the distracted cook, who was busy talking on the phone instead of tending the stove.

A fire starts behind the distracted cook.

We saw how fire can spread if you try to run outside with a burning pan full of grease.

What not to do with a greasy pan on fire.

The fire truck arrived, sirens screaming.

The fire truck arrives on the scene.

A firefighter stepped in to douse the fire using an extinguisher.

Fighting the fire.

Unfortunately, the fire wouldn’t go out.

Oops.

After several more attempts, the fire was finally put out.

A few more tries get the fire out.

After this dramatic demonstration, we headed to the home of friends for an all-American cookout with grilled hamburgers and hotdogs, watermelon, and a delicious blueberry-and-rhubarb pie.

An all-American cookout.

Good food and good company.

A big thanks to Jane and our hosts for sharing this experience with us.

Tuesday, July 3

International Turning Exchange  •  10:29 pm  

It was a fairly quiet day at the shop after our big day yesterday.

Jea