Posts tagged “Dorset

The new oak bench made for Tudor Arcade in Dorchester by Simon Thomas Pirie Furniture of Dorset has been installed and is now “officially open”, as a smiling John Beaves tells a smiling passer-by at the end of this video.

Click here to see how the bench was steam-bent and scorched, and read why.

Note: this video was filmed and edited by Stephen Banks (“Dorset Scouser“) with me (Jonathan Hudston) chipping in from the sidelines in a manner that I like to think was sometimes useful.

When we there, we were approached by a rather belligerent old man who pointed at the bench and said: “I hope this isn’t being paid for on the rates.” Momentarily, it was tempting to say YES, to see his reaction, but it was obvious what it would have been, and anyway,  it wouldn’t have been true. It’s paid for by the private owners of the arcade.

Personally, I think it’s good to have features that add character to a place.

One of the reasons that Lyme Regis has fared well in recent years is that the resort has been able to secure some eye-catching and distinctive street furniture; the famous ammonite lamp-posts, for example.

 

Dorset maker Guy Martin opens up for Dorset Art Weeks

THE SCUPLTOR and furniture maker Guy Martin is taking part in Dorset Art Weeks every day between Saturday, May 26 and Sunday, June 10. To mark the occasion here is a piece about him first published in 2002 in a handsome little booklet produced as part of a project called TM1 (short for tenminusone). TM1 featured nine artists based in West Dorset, each of whom had a little essay written about them by Sara Hudston, although her name didn’t appear.

The scheme (as far as I can remember) had two aims. First, to try to promote the careers of individual artists. Second, to improve the economy of West Dorset by showing it to be an attractive, creative place – somewhere worth visiting and worth doing business.

The scheme was funded by West Dorset District Council, South West Arts, and the South West of England Regional Development Agency.

The whole project has now been almost entirely forgotten, and the TM1 booklets are extraordinarily rare pieces of printed ephemera.

Now, clearly I’m biased, as I’m married to Sara Hudston, but it’s long seemed to me that her short essays were excellent pieces of work that deserve to be re-published and read.

The first piece to reappear on this site was about Amanda Wallwork. Next up, after Guy Martin, will be Carolyne Kardia, who is also taking part in this year’s Dorset Art Weeks. 

Parnham College, incidentally, was just outside Beaminster. It was set up by the furniture maker John Makepeace, who now lives in Beaminster itself and, yes, is also taking part in this year’s Dorset Art Weeks. In fact, he pretty much started them, if I remember right, but that is another story. Jonathan Hudston

Guy Martin: A “beautiful thriftiness”

Good design should serve the needs of humankind and the interests of the environment, believes furniture maker Guy Martin.

Using renewable local materials and ecologically sound methods of manufacture, Martin produces pieces that reject market-led criteria in favour of the needs and desires of individual people. His entire philosophy of making is founded on his belief in the value of purity and integrity. Martin’s faith in sustainable practice is governed by a strong sense of spirituality and service as exemplified by vernacular craft communities.

A chair called Cathedral made by Dorset furniture maker and sculptor Guy Martin from ash and stripped willow. It has a rounded bottom.

"Cathedral" by Guy Martin. Ash, Stripped Willow.

For six years Martin was design tutor at Parnham College in Dorset. His time there brought him into contact with desgners and business theorists of international repute, inspiring change and a rigorous reappraisal of values that enabled him to develop a unified philosophy of lifestyle and artistic practice.

Bench made by the Dorset sculptor furniture maker Guy Martin from lime-waxed birch and stainless steel

Bench by Guy Martin. Lime-Waxed Birch, Stainless Steel.

All Martin’s woods are sourced locally from renewable supplies. Cultivated willow from the Somerset levels was one of his favourite materials but supply difficulties have prompted him to make greater use of ash thinnings. He harvests the ash himself, selectively thinning as an essential part of woodland management. This choice of material displays a beautiful thriftiness since these small diameter poles would ordinarily be wasted or burnt for firewood.

Martin’s awareness of environmental issues also influences his practice in the workshop. He avoids using adhesives or other harmful chemicals and never disguises his core materials with veneers. Embellishment is restrained by functionality, emphasising the essential honesty of every piece. The result is a quality product where function has controlled the form, but works in balance with the possibilities of modern technology and other small-workshop constraints.

Storage tower made by the Dorset sculptor and furniture maker Guy Martin from lime-waxed ash and stainless steel

Storage Tower by Guy Martin. Lime-Waxed Ash, Stainless Steel.

Although Martin’s work is rooted in traditional English methods and influenced by the historic precedent of the medieval craft guilds, there is nothing sentimental about his approach. He uses machine processes where necessary and is not afraid to let the effects show on the finished item. He rightly views over-emphasis on hand techniques as an irrelevant attachment to suspect notions of authenticity, rather than a properly informed craft choice.

It is a measure of Martin’s range and skill that his elegant and original pieces avoid parochialism and yet speak so distinctly of a particular rural area. A recent development is the inclusion of stainless steel, which has made his work less explicitly rustic and lent his structures added modernity.

Guy Martin: Brought up on a converted torpedo boat

Guy Martin was brought up on a converted motor torpedo boat moored at Hayling Island. He studied at Portsmouth School of Art and St Martin’s School of Art in London, where he took a BA Hons in sculpture. In 1984 he started a contemporary furniture design practice. From 1988-94 he was design tutor at Parnham College in Dorset, during which period he developed a strong interest in ecology and global environmental concerns.

He has since established his own independent practice in Dorset, making interior domestic furniture, as well as teaching and lecturing. He says: “Design is a listening process, a responsibility and a service and it should take account of the environment and its resources.”

Guy Martin & Dorset Art Weeks 2012

Guy Martin’s Crown Studios at Old Crown Cottage in Greenham on the B3162 near Drimpton in the far west of Dorset are open every day during Dorset Art Weeks from 10am – 5pm between Saturday, May 26 and Sunday, June 10. On May 31, June 1, June 7 and June 8 he’s also open from 6pm to 8pm.

Mr Martin is putting on a joint show with Anne Quick – number 190 in the Dorset Art Weeks (DAW) brochure.

“Please come and enjoy our studios, garden and home with a cup of tea,” says the DAW entry. But note: no wheelchair access.

For more information, call 01308-868122, email or visit his website at http://www.guy-martin.com

Anne can be contacted via email on or visit her website at http://www.annequick.co.uk

In total, 100o artists are taking part in Dorset Art Weeks at 360 free venues: http://www.dorsetartweeks.co.uk

Or look out for a free printed brochure (actually, more like a book these days): Tourist Information Centres normally have a good supply.

 

New Dorset bench is A: throne? B: love seat? C: question mark? D: fun?

Or E: All of those things and more? The answer, of course, is E, certainly in the eyes of its makers – the team at Simon Thomas Pirie Furniture at Briantspuddle near Bere Regis in Dorset. The oak bench they’ve steam-bent and scorched is going to be installed in Dorchester’s Tudor Arcade, outside of Waitrose and Fat Face, at the start of May.  So how does Simon Pirie hope his creation will impress the eyes of its beholders and the backsides of its users?

He said: “I hope people will get a sense of fun out of it, I hope it will be visually stimulating, and I also hope it will spark conversation, because in a sense it is a conversation piece.

“It’s a practical piece of furniture with a few quirks, but it is first and foremost a conversation piece, somewhere people can meet and talk and people watch.”

In the video above Simon explains that the bench is partly inspired by traditional love seats, in which people sit side-by-side but back-to-back, so the bench is divided into a series of separate chairs.

Simon said: “The chair that you see as you walk down the arcade towards the supermarket will be face on towards you and the idea is that it will feel quite throne-like. The person who gets that seat is going to feel quite important because they are going to have the whole vista of the shopping arcade coming towards them. I’m looking forward to getting that kind of long shot down the arcade to see who’s got that prime seat.

“It might be me on occasions, I suppose.”

Simon Pirie trained in the 1990s at Hooke Park College near Beaminster in West Dorset. The college was set up by the internationally renowned furniture maker John Makepeace to encourage a generation of “entrepreneurs in wood”. Simon has been running his own fine furniture business for 12 years, until now working largely with individual clients.

The Dorchester bench is different. The result of a public art commission, it’s a significant new venture.

Simon said:  ”We wanted to create something special for this. I mean, we’re known as fine furniture makers. Public art is relatively new for us, and it’s an area we’re looking to expand into.

“This is the first piece that will actually go in situ, so it’s an important job for us.

“We’re working with architects and commercial companies rather than individual clients and that’s a little bit different for us, so it’s a groundbreaker.

“It also manages to encompass lots of other areas of interest, like steambending, like high-tech manufacturing techniques, and like scorching, so there’s lots of elements in there which are very exciting for us as furniture makers.

“And I guess the slightly quirky joke from my perspective is that, if you look at it from above, it’s actually in the shape of a question mark.

“So, there is that kind of question – What should it be used for? How can it be used? Hopefully it has that sense of fun about it, because you don’t want want to be too po-faced and serious.”

Simon said that he has always had a hankering to do outside furniture, and the chance to fulfill that wish in Dorchester has been gratifying.

“It’s our county town, it’s where local and regional government is based, so it’s good to do it in Dorchester.

“It’s a gem of a little town, it’s a beautiful place, and the arcade where it’s going to be the visual centrepiece is having a refresh.

“Despite the general air of gloom about the economy there’s actually quite a lot of optimism in Dorchester, there’s new projects and new buildings, so it’s an exciting place to be.

“It’s our local county town, six or seven miles away from our workshop; it feels very nice.”

Editor’s Note: I’ve been interested in Hooke Park College and people associated with it ever since I first went there about 18 years ago. Simon Pirie is part of the group of people who’ve spread out from there across Dorset… I made the video above with Stephen Banks (“Dorset Scouser“).

 

Bridport by Night: An alternative tourism video by Stephen Banks

So, it has been over a week since I uploaded my ‘labour of love’, Bridport by Night, to YouTube. The video really took off in the first four days, accumulating some 8,000 views in that period alone. Hits from technology site Gizmodo and Anglotopia helped it along its way, but the majority of views were picked up by an organic sharing frenzy on Facebook and Twitter.

Throughout last week, I had people who I didn’t know from the local area following me on Twitter and adding me on Facebook. Many of them commented expressing their praise for the video. To date, the video on YouTube has had about 75 comments (and the same number of replies by me), 206 likes and 2 dislikes – a comment reading “Two dislikes for this video? The pair of you: YOU ARE DEAD INSIDE” made me chuckle.

Interest has died down at the moment. A few people have quietly complained about how much I was mouthing off about it, so I haven’t been sharing it around so much. But the other night, ITV West Country Tonight came to West Bay and filmed me for a piece they are running. And this Saturday, the film is being shown at the Bridport Arts Centre as part of a Spirit of Bridport event.

My target number of views for the video is 12,977 (which is Wikipedia‘s listed population for Bridport). It should soon surpass that. I already have plans to make a second, improved version of the video. Difficult second album?

One man; 63 breweries

Brian Wood sat on the back of his DAF 1900 truck with sacks of malt at Palmers Brewery in Bridport, Dorset.

Brian Wood at Palmers Brewery in Bridport. His lorry has done more than 1.5 million miles. Above Brian's head is the trapdoor that leads though into Palmers' malt loft.

THIRTY years ago one of the unsung heroes of British brewing began criss-crossing the country with sacks of malt.

Brian Wood started carrying malt for Hugh Baird and Sons at Station Maltings in Witham in Essex in the Autumn of 1981. When Baird’s got taken over in the mid-1990s, he set up on his own.

I’ve met him a couple of times at Palmers Brewery in Bridport, where he’s been delivering malt since the early 1980s.

He’s a fine man, as I hope comes through in the video that I made about him for the Palmers Brewery YouTube channel.

Here, also, is a link to a story written about Brian Wood and Palmers.

What that story doesn’t contain is a list of all the UK breweries that Brian has been to.

It’s an evocative litany, so here it is. Fifty-nine different brewers, 63 separate breweries, some of them now shut for many years. Morrells’ Lion Brewery, for example, was converted into ‘luxury apartments’. Julia Hanson’s in Dudley was knocked down to make way for a Netto supermarket, turned this summer into an Asda.

  • Whitbread (Sheffield, Cheltenham, Salford)
  • Boddingtons (Manchester)
  • Joseph Holt (Manchester)
  • JW Lees (Manchester)
  • Timothy Taylor (Keighley)
  • Samuel Smith (Tadcaster)
  • Bass (Burton)
  • McMullens (Hertford)
  • Julia Hanson (Dudley)
  • Banks (Wolverhampton)
  • Hardy Hanson (Kimberley)
  • Brains (Cardiff)
  • Buckleys (Llanelli)
  • Felinfoel (Dyfed)
  • Wadworth (Devizes)
  • Hall & Woodhouse (Blandford)
  • Palmers Brewery (Bridport)
  • Otter Brewery (Blackdown Hills)
  • Butcombe (Blagdon)
  • Smiles (Bristol)
  • Hook Norton (Oxon)
  • Morrells (Oxford)
  • Fullers (Chiswick )
  • Tring (Hertford)
  • Adnams (Southwold)
  • Tolly’s (Ipswich)
  • Harveys (Lewes)
  • Hepworths (Horsham)
  • King & Barnes (Horsham)
  • Hull Brewery
  • Batemans (Wainfleet)
  • Robinsons (Stockport))
  • Thwaites (Blackburn)
  • Jennings (Cockermouth)
  • Moorhouse (Burnley)
  • Higsons (Liverpool)
  • Burtonwood Brewery
  • Everards (Leicester and Burton on Trent)
  • Marstons (Burton on Trent)
  • Ind Coope (Burton on Trent)
  • Castlemaine (Wrexham)
  • Oldham Brewery
  • Hart Brewery (Preston)
  • Mitchells (Lancaster)
  • Vaux (Sunderland & Sheffield)
  • Federation (Newcastle)
  • Courage (Bristol & Reading)
  • Crouch Brewery (Essex)
  • Gales (Horndean)
  • Devenish (Redruth)
  • St Austell (Cornwall)
  • Halls (Oxford)
  • Tisbury Brewery (Wiltshire)
  • Ringwood Brewery (Hampshire)
  • Shepherd Neame (Faversham)
  • Trough Brewery (Idle)
  • Brakspears (Henley on Thames)
  • Pilgrim (Reigate)
  • Mendip Brewery (Somerset)

Imagine going to the Trough Brewery at Idle for the first time! And seeing this, when you got there.

Nowadays Brian delivers mostly to Palmers in Dorset, Arkell’s in Swindon, Felinfoel near Llanelli, Harveys in Lewes, Elgood’s in Wisbech, Wadworth in Devizes and Fuller’s in Chiswick.

Good reason, I’d say, to favour those seven brewers.

Queen Victoria and the Dorset Piddle Riddle

“Legend has it that the villages of Puddletown and Briantspuddle, which used to contain the word ‘piddle’, changed their village titles to avoid embarrassing Queen Victoria whilst she was visiting.” So says the newly-published Little Book of Dorset. Is it true?

Wanted: Artists’ views of Dorset

Ancient road between Lyme Regis and Charmouth

A view of the coast road - long since crumbled away - between Lyme Regis and Charmouth. Artist and date unknown.

Bridport-based arts and heritage specialist Crystal Johnson explains why she’d like you to share any knowledge you might have about Dorset’s historic connections with artists.

FOR CENTURIES Dorset’s landscapes have inspired authors, poets, scientists and artists.

More than 40% of the county is classed as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB), including virtually the whole of West Dorset (click on this link for a map of the Dorset AONB).

One of the AONB’s special qualities is its “rich legacy of cultural associations”. 

I am now looking for information on artists who worked in Dorset in the past and depicted land, sea or townscapes.

I am interested in all levels of detail: names, views, people’s lives… There is no pre-determined time period. I am interested in anything that might tell us about the past or form a record of our current environment for the future.

Working in partnership with Dorset’s AONB team, I am hoping to put together a comprehensive art-historical record to see where artistic interpretations can be used to pin-point and demonstrate landscape changes over time.

We want to present the cultural legacy left by visual artists who lived and visited Dorset’s  AONB in a way that will inspire new ways of appreciating, understanding and managing the area now and in the future.

Plans for Dorset AONB art walks

Although it is only at a very early stage, I hope my researches might inform a range of projects.

One of these projects could be the development of self-guided walks inspired by artists’ depictions of the landscape.

We could perhaps put together a map pinpointing viewpoints, images of artists’ work from those same viewpoints, biographical information about artists and their relationship to a particular place.

One aim would be to explore how and why Dorset’s landscapes have changed.

We would also want to give walkers relevant local historical, geographical and natural information as they progress through the countryside.

Information on local facilities such as local transport links, places to eat and other amenities would also be included to ensure that walks are well planned and easy to undertake.

I hope that research will identify views and artworks, show how suitable (or unsuitable) different locations might be, and reveal what potential there really is for informative and enjoyable walks.

It may also be possible to develop linked activities such as landscape exhibitions, work with local schools and artist-led community projects.

The range and viability of activities will be explored through the research phase, together with an exploration of potential funding sources.

So, if you can help, please do. You can contact me by email at
Crystal.johnson1@virgin.net

Thank you!