Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Fundy Gardeners 2011 Calendar

AVAILABLE NOW!

2011 CALENDAR
$8.00
Photographs of the gardens offered for garden tours by our members in 2010.

Includes the winning photographs from the Fundy Gardeners’ 2010 Exhibition.

Includes photos by Fundy Gardener Freeman Patterson

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Philip Savage Fundy Gardener Member

Philip Savage of Quispamsis has started a business sculpting wood and making furniture from wood. His style is 'contemporary organic.' That's not much of a surprise given that this wood sculptor and furniture   maker grew up on a flower farm on Darlings Island, picking up pieces of wood as a young boy and whittling  them into shapes, and worked for many years as a landscape gardener.Today, when you go through his portfolio, you can see how all of his 26 years growing up on the farm, working with plants, and hiking, paddling and observing nature have influenced his work."I've been always exploring plants and growing things. It's so essential to woodworking - knowing where it came from and how it grows and the real intimate characteristics of wood. I was really interested in it as a gardener and still am."Savage recently turned from being a seasonal landscape gardener to making a living as a full-time wood carver and furniture maker. In the garage of his Chamberlain Road home, he chisels and sands wood - his favourite being ash and dark walnut - into sculptural or functional pieces whose shapes mimic nature's own shaping process.Seeds, as protective and powerful vessels capable of transformation, are found throughout his work. Carved maple pods hold dark-stained seeds, oversized seed shells carved from walnut and ash lay empty of their potential, and a trio of swimmers carved in birch resemble a stand of waving trees.

"I would call my style contemporary organic - the shapes that nature presents and the way the elements shape things, or the structure of plants and seeds, and the way they grow, occasionally throwing in some man-made angles to keep it grounded."Having some right angles or a flat top on a coffee table brings back that aspect that we recognize as human and comforting in some ways, but also let's us get closer to nature and the true forms that always existed before people started shaping everything."Savage began his relationship with wood when he was a 10-year-old boy growing up on the family farm called Straw Flower Ridge. Seeing his interest in carving, his parents bought him a few rudimentary tools and later enrolled him with the KV Carvers Club.

"I was like the only kid there. These guys were like retired, but they taught me a lot."In his teen years, he abandoned this interest, giving into the usual teenage "temptations, impatience and all that." But in his early 20s, he resumed carving - a way to fill the long winters unemployed as a landscape gardener."I had these winters to kill and I just started exploring it more as a sculptural medium."Last fall, he had his first exhibition at the Saint John Arts Centre."I got tonnes of positive feedback from people," he said, "so I decided to try this and give it a go and it's been going really well."He's recently completed a piece for the University of Dalhousie's medical school, and this past February, the Town of Quispamsis commissioned him to create gifts for the corporate sponsors of the Q-Plex - a commission that was a turning point for Savage's new business."That's when I thought I could make it viable," he said.While the business is still in its infancy, Savage is optimistic about its potential. In July, he toured across Ontario after showcasing his talent as a guest of the National Capital Commission on Canada Day.It was there that he realized there are fewer artists and craftspeople working in wood - afraid, he said, of not being able to compete with cheap furniture factories."There's a few people and they seem to be doing really well, but I got excited because I saw this niche of bringing wood back into people's homes and lives," he said. "I think there is great potential for it."
That's why he's looking to the future and his dream of a grove of trees. While he may expand into some of the other elemental materials - such as metal and stone - he wants to celebrate "the shape and unique qualities of wood both in sculpture and furniture design," he said.For that reason, he's considering moving to a more rural setting where he can grow his future forest, set up shop, use a chainsaw, and "make more noise without bothering the neighbours."Already, he's tending to an assortment of seedlings, which he wants to shape and train with curves and strengths."Then they could be worked into high-end sculptural furniture because not only were they shaped by tools but nature shaped them. So I'm pretty excited about that. But that will take 20 to 25 years," he said. "It's my long-term investment."

For more information, visit www.savagesculpture.com.

Reprinted from the Telegraph -Journal. Erin Dwyer writes the Developments column for the Telegraph-Journal. It appears Tuesdays. To make a suggestion about a new business in the Kennebecasis Valley, email her at dwyer.erin@telegraphjournal.com.