Sgian Dubh":1fzyq42n said:
PAC1":1fzyq42n said:
Unfortunately this side of the pond most punters say "Sam who". I even had one punter who knew the difference between Sam Maloof and Hal Taylor's work and I still could not get any interest!
And even fewer have heard of
Gary Weeks, a chairmaker I know from my days living in Texas that makes 'Maloofian' chairs. Hal Taylor is one of the better known of the derivative makers of the type. There are a host more sub-Maloofian chair makers that visitors here can do a search for if they are curious enough.
These guys seem very much to be 'one-trick ponies'; turning out the same piece time after time. It surprises me that if the market in the States for Maloof-style rockers is so large that no-one seems to have geared up to have them mass-produced in China.
Repititious work like this must get rather dull. A bit like coming up with an exaggerated version of a traditional cabriole leg and then slapping it ad nauseum onto each corner of every undistinguished cabinet you make for the next quarter century.
Everyone to their own, of course. What sticks in my craw a little though, is when a man of such little originality and flair sets himself up as being an equal of such genuine design premier leaguers as Savage and Makepiece when in reality he'd struggle to make the bench at Stockport County! (Figuratively, not literally of course. I'm sure he'd make them a lovely bench with some of those legs he presumably gets his students churning out as test pieces!)
This whole 'Woodwork as Art' thing makes me smile. There are true artists around such as those mentioned above, our very own Chris Tribe, and my friend Garry Olsen. Those that I know and respect however, lack all hint of 'preciousness'.
http://www.christribe.co.uk/about-chris ... furniture/
http://www.garryolson.co.uk/
Then, to cap it all, he has a go at Sam Maloof!
Sgian Dubh":1fzyq42n said:
Maloof's work is in any case heavily derivative
Original design is not just about coming up with new and gimmicky ideas that have never been thought of before. Maloof's rocker may have incorporated elements used previously but there is no doubt whatsoever that when assembled into a single piece it is a design classic immediately recognisable and quite unlike anything seen before.
If you don't think that Maloof's work is original Richard, how can you think that your own is?
Sgian Dubh":1fzyq42n said:
Some of you may think I'm a pompous self-regarding pillock
:lol:
I was very interested to find this on your website, Richard.
Not a bad effort, although I could give you some useful pointers on how to improve the aesthetiscs of a piece like this.
Just think, if you'd have stuck to this kind if thing you could have made a good living from woodwork without resorting to teaching!
:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
Cheers
Brad
An artisan, not an artist.