Phil Pascoe
Established Member
Ikea apparently uses one percent of the world's timber - it's still a lot, though.
phil.p":1ixg3xun said:Ikea apparently uses one percent of the world's timber - it's still a lot, though.
Harry 48":bjpmpb60 said:I can remember John did articles for one of the woodworking magazines and very good they were but his continual rants about power tools made him unpopular with the tool advertisers. The question of hand or power tool in MHO is each to his own
Nick Gibbs":20tiva7u said:I am currently working on an anthology of John's articles, trying to fit them into a outline he'd devised for a book, called The Anarchist Woodworker.
I do like Brown's chairs and that whole area of trad and vernacular stuff
Jacob":603r7f4d said:Hmm. Have to say I'm not the slightest bit interested in Krenov (except as a phenomenon) so I couldn't begin to compare or contrast him with J Brown. But I do like Brown's chairs and that whole area of trad and vernacular stuff. Must pop in to St Fagans again sometime soon.
No way! :lol:Cheshirechappie":171n2dwj said:..... ....
Krenov did work analogous to high art .....
I think you have it completely the wrong way around. Krenov was popular mainly on the amateur woodwork scene and is virtually unknown outside it. Brown, and vernacular products in general, have much more in common with the mainstream of the modern movement.Brown did work analogous to pop art. Both are perfectly valid.
Jacob":h1rd4om0 said:No way! :lol:Cheshirechappie":h1rd4om0 said:..... ....
Krenov did work analogous to high art .....I think you have it completely the wrong way around. Krenov was popular mainly on the amateur woodwork scene and is virtually unknown outside it. Brown, and vernacular products in general, have much more in common with the mainstream of the modern movement.Brown did work analogous to pop art. Both are perfectly valid.
I think it's hard to compare chairmakers and cabinetmakers. The disciplines are so far apart.
marcus":31vgwzyc said:I think it's hard to compare chairmakers and cabinetmakers. The disciplines are so far apart.
That is true, but in the article John Brown doesn't make that distinction — in fact rather the opposite. It's pretty clear that he's talking about all wood crafts, including cabinet making. And to me this points to the heart of the problem with the article — it is not a reasoned argument, it is a polemic. It expounds and gesticulates and presses all the right emotional buttons, as polemics do, which makes it that little bit harder to notice that what is actually being said is riven with half-truths, avoided complexity and nuance and, in places, downright falsehood. And then you learn that the chap used PAR for his cabinets — in other words was happy for some kid in a factory to wear the 'monkey suit', and be subjected to the noise and the dust, while he works away quietly in his peaceful workshop lecturing other people from his high horse. I think one is justified in stopping reading at that point. Which is a shame, as the chairs themselves are good, and there are also, here and there, nuggets of truth in what he is saying.
Yes it is a polemic. If you look for a closely reasoned argument you will be disappointed and miss the point, which is a shame. What do you want, a manifesto and ten commandments?marcus":1jr93fxx said:I think it's hard to compare chairmakers and cabinetmakers. The disciplines are so far apart.
That is true, but in the article John Brown doesn't make that distinction — in fact rather the opposite. It's pretty clear that he's talking about all wood crafts, including cabinet making. And to me this points to the heart of the problem with the article — it is not a reasoned argument, it is a polemic. It expounds and gesticulates and presses all the right emotional buttons, as polemics do, which makes it that little bit harder to notice that what is actually being said is riven with half-truths, avoided complexity and nuance and, in places, downright falsehood. And then you learn that the chap used PAR for his cabinets — in other words was happy for some kid in a factory to wear the 'monkey suit', and be subjected to the noise and the dust, while he works away quietly in his peaceful workshop lecturing other people from his high horse. I think one is justified in stopping reading at that point. Which is a shame, as the chairs themselves are good, and there are also, here and there, nuggets of truth in what he is saying.
What a shockingly elitist thing to say!Cheshirechappie":1y2ck6u9 said:...........
John Brown's chairs are supremely functional and easy on the eye - fine work in every way. Krenov's cabinets were sublime - and they were not bought by amateur woodworkers, either; they were bought by the sort of people who appreciate fine art, and could afford it. (No doubt I'll get a lecture on socialism now; however, it's a very good thing there are people about who can afford a high price for fine furniture and fine art, or neither would exist; and we'd all be the poorer for that.)
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