Friday 20 February 2009

A Break with Tradition




Thinking about a new Shaker piece to show at this years Salon d’métiers d’art in Orléans proved to be a difficult task. I wanted to make something with a relatively small footprint to maximise the stand area and in addition show some cabinetry work to compliment my tables and chairs. The well known and much copied Shaker chimney cupboard seemed to present a form that perfectly fitted my criteria. However I wanted to give it a slightly different interpretation, one based on fine furniture making traditions, rather than the somewhat utilitarian style of the original.

The shape that eventually evolved in my mind, ended owing more to the Arts and Crafts Movement, than it did to the shakers; but in my view this works very well. These two styles quite often converge in a way that is not always apparent. It could even be said that my interpretation looks even more like a chimney that the Shaker design, tapering as it does towards the top, in a classical chimney form. This is perhaps a little unfair as the term is only an arbitrary one. The Shakers didn’t set out to make a cupboard that looked like a chimney; this is simply a name someone at a later date appropriated.

My version is in Cherry with figured Oak panels, Walnut knobs and Walnut pegs to the joints. The back is constructed the same way allowing the piece to stand centre room if required.

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