Greenwood Gathering
The Greenwood Gathering
This post is sort of two articles in one. It’s a bit of a catch up since the fire happened, and about a gathering of craft. The start of a new chapter in a way. If you have no idea what I’m talking about,I did have a blog post about the fire written but I am still unsure if I should post it at this point. Hesitation.. let me tell you.They say it’s hard to step in someone else’s shoes, but I think it’s even harder to step into an older pair of your own shoes.. It has been a long time since I can act of feel like myself. I am due for an old fashioned ramble so here we go. Put the coffee on, put on your favorite record and get ready to read about a gathering of craft.
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Ive been a bit reclusive the past 8 months but it doesn’t mean I haven’t had Wood Culture on my mind.
I’ve talked in the past about what this wood culture is and my direction but recently a great carver and friend of mine couldn’t have said it any better. Check out Jarrod’s blog and ramble on that subject, amongst other things that have been on my mind about wood. This is that gathering Im talking about again.. things I took away from hanging out with him for a week or two now gets brought to this intersection of carvers, and they absorb and share their side. It’s all very heady like I said, but if you’re a carver, you’ll understand where I’m coming from.
It’s a very exciting time and this is proof that I’m not the only one who can smell a bit of treen revolution in the air.
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The story begins with a ramshackle cabin nestled up under the forest canopy of a great old mountain just north of Woodstock. Something I find very hard to explain or illustrate to people is how far up into the woods we are here.
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I feel very fortunate that I don’t have to drive over an hour to get to the mountains. We live on Mount Guardian and Overlook mountain. So when we harvest wood, we have to climb it’s steep hillsides so I don’t exactly have a flat yard, but the forest is my yard. Not many people can claim that. While looking over these pictures I kept thinking how it looked like we were sitting in the middle of the woods carving, and then realized we really were.
Our Cabin in the woods - She was built in 1903 when this Art & Craft colony was built. A son of a wealthy industrialist was born into the ever-changing world of the industrial revolution who must’ve been seeking something else. He searched around France and other countries for the perfect location for his vision and settled on Woodstock, New York. Which is really to blame for why this town has always been a haven for many of the artist movements. Yes I’m talking almost 70 years before the Woodstock festival that shares it’s name but was held over an hour’s drive away from here. He had a crazy idea of a utopian Arts and Crafts Community and I like the idea of it really. Was it successful? Depends on how you look at it, but I'd say no. It's always been run by wealthy people that have little interest in the actual arts and crafts side, with their eyes on the gold. So as expected, the artists living there (or trying to make a living) have always ended up going somewhere else with the original hope of a utopian community. But I did like the idea of this thinking maybe this will be there year where it all finally clicks. There is nothing wrong with being fed up with what is going on using your bare hands to work on a change. Being rebellious and walking the walk… maybe Im just being romantic about the history and he was just thinking it’d be a fun project and make some money? You can be the judge.. but its the idea that counts in the end.
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All of this long reading is worth it I promise..
The house we live in belonged to Jane Whitehead who was the wife of the founder. Kind of amazing to think of how important this place was, and how many influential people lived here, not to mention how many crafts and movements began inside these very walls that have been left unchanged. It’s a historic landmark and it’s really something knowing this place was America’s first Arts & Crafts Colony. I like to think Im not just living here but now Im a part of this ongoing experiment, and now it’s a part of a new craft movement but more on that in the future. This is a story about a gathering of spoon carvers.
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So it was time to finally pull the trigger. Something I learned after the fire was to not hesitate and jump right into ideas and projects. I regret many things because of that fire last November. I was working on a book or two, was getting photos ready for little galleries, a pile of almost finished films, and other projects but never debuted them because I wasn’t sure they’d ever be ‘perfect’ enough. A word we should all learn to forget about saying. Which brings up a great point.. when you are an artist or craftsman, perfection is something we always work towards but know we’ll never see it. This is what keeps us hungry, but can be crippling too.
So for this first ‘test’ gathering I wanted to invite very few people, after all we haven’t had any guests over since the fire 8 months ago. Too many people would be overwhelming and it would defeat the whole purpose of this gathering. With a smaller group of carvers, it'd be a lot easier to discuss the ideas that have been stirring in my mind for quite some time.
Patrick Alan Diette and Luc Lavoie have been badgering me for a couple of months to get together. I'm thankful to have good friends that want to see me back at it again, and not hiding in a hole somewhere in a mountain. So I planned one very last minute. Don Nalezyty form Washington D.C. can tell you.. What Maybe 5 days notice to the folks who travelled the lands to get all the way up here in the Catskills?
Right after the fire I was invited to come demonstrate my kuksa carving at the Milan Spoon Gathering but summer came fast and I wasn’t ready to leave home so soon. We’re almost settled in here but for example, we just installed lights in the living room after three months of darkness - we have no furniture other than a table and just enough chairs for five people. I guess in a way the gathering was perfect timing so everyone got to discuss craft. But my new midwest carving family and some NY friends were out west in Milan carving, so feeling left out we had to carve.
It comes full circle when you think back to why this colony was originally built. It was the love of the land and a crazy and revolutionary idea towards a distant utopian craft future. It exactly didn’t go as planned but the colony is still trucking along alive and well.
With that out of the way..
If you haven’t carved with other people you need to get something going. It doesn’t take much to have a little carve-in or spoon gathering as a lot of us have been calling it. In Britain it seems like Im reading about them more and more and wish we practiced this here in the states. The obstacle is how much of a land mass our country so it divides us up into little pockets of greenwood carvers. It took about 20 hours od driving just to get to Grand Marais where North House is located. So I fully encourage others to run off with that same idea and theme.
Don’t have much, but have a couple old tools to make spoons, and a dusty old chopping stump? Bring it, make a lunch, and carve with someone new. Next time invite more people and eventually you will have bigger gatherings. Spread the woodculture like the flu I say.It is a sure fire way to increase your skills and techniques while seeing how others build their workflows.
Not to mention the hilarious banter and heady discussions. I still haven’t posted about my trip to North House but that place is the hotspot for this sort of thing and we really lived it up. Serious focus on craft all day and into the night where it was a roar of banjo playing, stomping, ale bowl sipping, and very deep discussion about our involvement as humans and how craft ties it all together. It was like a summit of the spoon carving realm in the US. I am grateful to be brought under their wing especially during the week of the fire. Was a lot of mixed emotions, and a huge turning point in my life in a lot of ways. I look forward to visiting them all again. Thanks guys.
So these little offshoot gatherings are great because we can make ourselves a little more known, and connect up the network one by one. Highly recommended.. start gathering and don’t look back.
What makes a great gathering? This is something a bunch of us have been discussing for a couple years. It's tough to plan out since there is always so much catching up to do, studying others work, getting critiques, and actually sitting down to carve things. Think about this when you look throughout the photos. I’m not sure I know the answer yet, but I have some ideas.
One thing I think is important is to bring a pile of your spoons, and maybe some of your collection of other makers. It reveals a lot about you without saying words.
Here is my (new) collection - The spoon rack miraculously survived the fire, tucked away in the far corner of the shop which was the only tiny portion untouched from the building that burned down. The kuksa on the left was actually the second cup I had ever carved and was made maybe a year before I ever made my first spoon. Glad I still have it even though I don’t like it. It’s a bit clumsy and sanded but it gets the job done and marks a time in my life when treen really got me fired up for the first time. The rest were made within the last two years.
As for the spoons from left to right: Barn Carder, Jarrod Stone Dahl (x3), Magnus Sundelin, Patrick Diette, Thomas Dengler, Don Nalezyty (x2), Luc Lavoie (x2), and the rest to the right are mine. I need a bigger rack now because I just got new spoons this gathering.
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Can’t have important discussions without ale bowl action. Jarrod made those and they get used a lot. If ale bowls could talk.. Those are his wooden plates too.
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