Segmented Turners May Summary

The Segmented Woodturners virtual chapter of the AAW has released the May Club Summary. Here are some of the recent happenings:

Chapter Challenge

The Winter/Spring Chapter Challenge has ended. There were twenty-seven entries in this contest based on feature rings. First place ended in a tie between Ken Cowell and Bill Wyko:

Practice by Bill Wyko

 

 

 

First Place (tie) – Practice by Bill Wyko

 

 

 

Luna by Ken Cowell

 

 

 

First Place (tie) – Luna by Ken Cowell

 

 

 

NW Mass Ascension by David Grady

 

 

 

Second Place – NM Mass Ascension by David Grady

 

 

 

Bubbles by Larry Watson

 

 

 

Third Place (tie) – Bubbles by Larry Watson

 

 

 

stdaa by Russell Norman

 

 

 

Third Place (tie) – stdaa by Russell Norman

 

 

 

Membership

There are new members joining regularly and there are now over 500 members of the Segmented Woodturners.

Segmented Symposium

Registrations are looking good for the upcoming symposium in October. Registrations can be made online so get yours in as soon as possible if you are planning to attend. You can register until September 15th and receive a $50 discount. After that date the registration will be $300.

If you’re the spouse of a segmented turner attending the symposium and want to attend all the sessions, there is a new $150 spouse option available on the online registration form. This admission will offer all the same items of the full price admission including attendance at the Saturday night banquet.

Also, there are two scholarships available for Chapter members that may not have the resources to attend. See our prior post.

You can get all the information in the Symposium Brochure.

Upcoming Segmented Turning Classes

May 20 – 26, 2012
Easy Segmented Platters and Expressive Wall Art
Instructor: Linda Sutter
John C. Campbell Folk School

June 3 – 9, 2012
Turning in the Polychromatic Style: Staved Construction
Instructor: Don Russell
John C. Campbell Folk School

June 25 -‐ 29, 2012
Segmented Turning: pushing your skills to the next level
Instructor: Curt Theobald
Anderson Ranch

July 8 – 14, 2012
Segmented Turning
Instructor: Malcolm Tibbetts
Arrowmont

September 4 – 8, 2012
Segmented turning: Where Precision Partners with Turned Elegance
Instructor: Malcolm Tibbetts
The Mark Adams School of Woodworking

Web Stats

Unique Visitors: 5174
Number of Visits: 14722
Pages Visited: 237618

Yellowstone Woodturners Symposium 7

yellowstone woodturners logoThe members of the Yellowstone Woodturners, an AAW chapter in Billings, Montana have have announced their 7th Annual Symposium scheduled for October 6th and 7th at the Billings Career Center. The demonstrators for this year’s symposium are Malcolm Tibbetts who will cover segmenting from A to Z, and Sam Angelo who will demonstrate Dying your Wood Projects.

Cost for the 2-day event is $95, but the fee is only $80 if you register by September 14th. More information and the registration form can be found on the YWT website.

May Meeting – Show and Tell & Expert Panel

The May meeting will consist of two major items: an extended show and tell session and a question and answer session conducted by a panel. The panel will consist of Pat McCart, Dave Schweizer, Paul Crabtree, Ted Bartholomew, Jim Cotter, and Bill Wood. The panel will act as a sounding board for your questions, preferably related to wood turning, but, what the heck, we will try anything. Seriously though, if the answer does not come from the panel, I am sure that someone in our audience will be able to assist. We are extremely fortunate in having a member base that has delved into almost all elements of turning; be it spindles, bowls, vessels, segmented, pens, decorating, finishing, or what have you.

Please bring the pieces that you enjoy the most and share them with the rest of us. If you have a problem piece, by all means bring it with you. There will be someone here who can help you with it. If you are wondering what tool to use or if there is a jig that would make your turning easier, this is the time and the place to address it.

Most of the time we have to cut short the time allotted for helping each other solve problems or explaining how in the world you do that. This is the meeting to resolve those problems. So bring your problems and your problem resolutions and attend what should turn out to be a very inspirational meeting.

AAW Woodturning Sales Venues

The AAW provides a venue for woodturners and wood art collectors to come together. There are three venues available on the AAW website:

  • Artists/Gallery Market Place – This is where woodturners can list their work for sale. You must be an AAW member and pay a $10 fee to list your item, but there are no requirements to view the items that are listed for sale. There is a wide variety of work including pieces by Rodney Peterson, John Beaver, Cindy Drozda, Binh Pho, Curt Theobald, Bob Stocksdale, Malcolm Tibbetts, Stuart Mortimer, Ralph Watts and many others. There is an amazing collection of art available here.
  • Collector/Museum Corner – This is a secondary market for wood art for collectors, museums and estates who want to sell or barter their pieces. You must be an AAW member and pay a $10 fee to list your item, but there are no requirements to view the items that are listed for sale. Currently there are pieces offered by Mel Lindquist, Bert Marsh, Ed Moulthrop, Dale Chase, William Hunter, Bob Stocksdale and David Ellsworth.
  • Collector/Museum Wish List – This is for collectors, galleries and museums to list wood art they wish to acquire either new or through a secondary market. Membership in the AAW is required, but there is no fee. There are currently three listings in this venue

These venues offer AAW members a powerful tool to help market their woodturnings. The AAW website receives over 40,000,000 hits every year, and has 62,119 other websites that link to theirs, so $10 is very reasonable and the exposure could help with your other marketing efforts.

Covington Days Art Show Call For Entries

covington days festival art showThe Covington Days Festival has issued a call for entries for the annual Covington Days Festival Art Show. The show is scheduled for July 20th to 22nd at Cedar Heights Middle School in Covington. SPSW and Covington Arts Commission member Jonathan Combs is encouraging members to submit their work. He says that there weren’t many turned items last year and this is a good opportunity to expose our craft to more people.

This is a juried show with prizes awarded in six categories. The City of Covington also selects one piece of art per day for purchase to become part of the city’s art collection. All artwork must be original and priced to sell. There is a 20% commission for all sales which will be payable to the City of Covington.

Art intake is on July 19th with a free reception on the 20th. Entry fee is $5.00 per piece.

More information can be found at www.covingtonfestival.com

AAW Board Message

Note – The following message was sent by AAW Board member Binh Pho.

binh phoWhat’s new at the AAW Symposium in San José?

I have attended all but one AAW symposium since 1992. Since then, the number of demonstrator rotations, the tradeshow, and the Instant Gallery (IG) have been steadily growing. I have participated in symposiums around the world: England, Ireland, France, and I just recently returned from TurnFest in Australia. The most noticeable difference is the number of turned objects that are displayed at other symposiums compared to the AAW’s Instant Gallery.

At TurnFest, the 550 attendees exhibited 100 pieces in the Instant Gallery. This would mean that about 20 percent of the turners were represented, if each attendee had brought one piece. At the AAW symposiums, the total IG numbers work out to be about one-and-a-half times the number of attendees! And this has been true for the past 10 years. The quality and quantity of works exhibited are growing at a fast pace; I could spend an entire day there and still not have the chance to admire everything.

aaw 2012 symposiumI will moderate the Business of Business panel in San José, and I invited Thomas Riley, owner of Riley Gallery, to participate. While discussing gallery business, he and I came up with the idea of his gallery renting space at the convention center where special exhibits are located adjacent to the Instant Gallery. He will have a gallery-quality booth set up to display the work of artists that he represents. This addition to the AAW symposium is important for a number of reasons:

  1. Many of the woodturners who attend AAW symposiums do not regularly have the opportunity to visit gallery exhibitions of contemporary woodturning. Displayed in the manner of contemporary sculpture in museums, this means of exhibiting the work is inspirational. It is an opportunity for attendees to see work from leading figures in contemporary woodturning displayed under gallery lighting in a walled-off environment.
  2. Many collectors and museum curators attend our symposiums, and it is important for them to see high-end works, displayed in a gallery setting, along with the work of attendees in the Instant Gallery. This will both assist in growing the marketplace for contemporary woodturning and may also result in works being acquired for museum collections that can be enjoyed by the larger public.
  3. There are many woodturners who produce high-end work exhibited in museums but who aren’t able to travel to every symposium. Many will be represented by Riley Gallery, offering us an opportunity to view works in person that many attendees might not otherwise see.
  4. Many symposium attendees are happy to enjoy woodturning as hobbyists; however, there are some who are interested in exhibiting in galleries, nationally and in their hometown. Gaining knowledge of how works are displayed in this setting and learning more about the gallery business will assist these individuals with exhibiting and promoting their work.

This may prove to be the beginning of a new venture for the AAW, and if it is successful, I hope other galleries will join us at future symposiums. We will then be able to enjoy a “tradeshow” for the finished product, as well as a tradeshow for tools, wood, machines, and instructional materials, which are vital to the creation of the work. I am pleased that the AAW can assist and support a growing market for contemporary woodturning for the collectors and museum curators who seek to share it with an even larger segment of the public.

Binh Pho