The World Turns:
AAW@25
ART  &  DESI GN
CHICAGO
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Dedicated to providing education, information, and organization to those interested in woodturning. 
An international, non-prot organization, the American Association of Woodturners is dedicated to the advancement of woodturning, 
a specialized form of woodworking using the lathe. The AAW has more than 300 local chapters in the United States, and 14,000 
members around the world. The local chapters provide instruction, fellowship and networking for turners at all levels.
To nd out more about the AAW, visit their website: www.woodturner.org
Members  of  the  AAW  include  professionals,  amateurs,  gallery  owners,  collectors,  and  wood  and  tool  suppliers.  The  AAW 
publishes American Woodturner, sponsors the worlds largest woodturning symposium, hosts an active online members forum, 
and provides educational grants, insurance and more to its members. The AAW is dedicated to providing information and support 
to its members and others through publications, DVDs and more.
About the American Association of Woodturners
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In  1985,  thirteen  individuals  gathered  at  Arrowmont  School  of  Arts  and  Crafts  in  Tennessee  to  discuss  the  idea  of  creating  a 
woodturning  organization.  The  eld  of  artistic  woodturning  had  grown  dramatically  in  the  United  States  during  the  previous 
decade, and the time had come to create an organization to support its communication, education, and exhibitions. This growth 
was  largely  due  to  a  number  of  individuals  who  had  taken  an  ancient,  utilitarian  craft  and  transformed  it  into  a  means  of  self-
expression.
  A  quarter-century  later,  four  of  the  individuals  who  had  been  integral  to  the  creation  of  the  American  Association  of 
Woodturners (AAW), formed as a nonprot in 1986, continue to create inspiring work and are featured in the AAW@25 exhibiton 
at SOFA Chicago: Mark Lindquist, who started the woodturning program at Arrowmont with his father Mel; David Ellsworth, 
the rst Board president of the AAW; William Hunter; and Al Stirt, who served on the rst the AAW Board of Directors. Four 
additional U.S. artists who have emerged over the last 25 years and have continued to reinvent the craft of woodturning, through 
leading presentations at AAW symposia and elsewhere, are featured in the exhibition as well. 
  Woodturners  have  practiced  their  craft  for  centuries  and  the  process  has  always  been  international  in  scope.  From 
ancient Egypt to the villages of Europe, woodturners created utilitarian wares and decorative details for furniture and architecture. 
Considering that the woodturning process has existed for so long, it is interesting to note that the use of a lathe as a means of self-
expression is a relatively new phenomenon. This contemporary approachutilizing bowl and vessel forms as nonutilitarian objects 
of contemplationbegan mere decades before the creation of the AAW. It grew out of a revolutionary American spirit of design, 
and when images of the bold new work by David Ellsworth, Mark Lindquist, and others began to appear in publications, the 
possibilities of artistic woodturning spread quickly throughout the world. Twenty-ve years ago if you saw a piece of sculpturally 
turned wood, it would probably have been made by an American, Terry Martin, a leading Australian woodturner, notes. Now it 
is just as likely to have been produced by a New Zealander, a Frenchman, a South African, an Israeli, or any of the people across 
the world who have embraced this art form.
  Stephen  Hogbin,  an  Englishman  living  and  working  in  Canada,  was  central  to  expanding  artistic  woodturning 
internationally. At the 1974 World Crafts Council Conference in Toronto, an Australian initiative to have a Craftsman in Residence 
at  Melbourne  State  College  was  announced,  and  Hogbin  traveled  to  Australia  in  this  role  soon  after.  As  a  result,  connections 
among artists from England, Canada, Australia, and the United States were made. At this time everything was reevaluateda 
result of travel and the times, Hogbin says. With each move, I became very aware of the differences between English-speaking 
countries on separate continents. Changing cultures or moving from the comfort of the familiar is really valuable for a creative 
person.
  Hogbins impact on Australian woodturners was extraordinary. Australia is home to some of the most strikingly beautiful 
timbers, a rich history of Aboriginal art, and government-supported arts and education programs. With the freedom of expression 
that artistic woodturning offered, artists across the country began to produce phenomenal work, much of it nding its way into 
collections in the United States.
  The AAW@25 exhibition at SOFA Chicago features three leading gures from Australia who represent diverse approaches 
to woodturning: Terry Martin, Vaughn Richmond, and Neil Scobie. Terry Martin has proven the most inuential, having spent 
decades traveling the globe to speak and demonstrate at symposia and writing articles and books on the international woodturning 
scene.  These  publications  have  been  vital  to  the  growth  of  contemporary  artistic  woodturning.  The  AAWs  journal  American 
Woodturner continues to be an important means of educating and providing community. Living down under, a long way from 
the hub of the AAW, it is hard to keep track of trends in the wood eld, notes Neil Scobie. With American Woodturner, and the 
websites and forums, the distance is diminished.
The World Turns: AAW@25
  During  the  past  three  decades,  Canadas  Michael  Hosaluk  has  been  a  leading  gure  in  inspiring  and  expanding  the 
eld  internationally  through  his  perception-challenging  artwork  and  his  time  spent  organizing  and  traveling  to  demonstrate  at 
symposia. I have always believed we should push the limits of interpretation in the eld of woodturning, Hosaluk says. I was 
determined from the beginning to contribute to the growth of this eld through my work, and what still motivates me to contribute 
are the people and the fun I have associating with them.
  Graeme  Priddle  attended  a  three-day  conference  of  New  Zealands  National  Association  of  Woodturners,  where 
Hosaluks approach made clear the potential of the process. I had been turning for three years, mainly knocking out bowls and 
simple stuff from pretty wood to keep the bills paid, Priddle recalls. The conference featured international turners including Al 
Stirt and Michael Hosaluk. I spent 90 percent of the conference with Hosaluk, as his creative freedom and openness to cut, 
subtract,  add,  paint,  burn,  and  embellish  captured  my  imagination.  Soon  after,  Priddle  received  an  invitation  from  the  AAW 
to  show  a  piece  in  Growth  Through  Sharing,  the  rst  AAW  exhibition,  curated  in  conjunction  with  the  10th  anniversary  AAW 
symposium in Greensboro, North Carolina. Attending the Greensboro symposium was intimidating because I had never seen so 
many woodturners in one place and so many whose work I had only admired in magazines, Priddle says. Everyone went out of 
their way to welcome me and introduce me to the great AAW family. I was immediately overwhelmed by the generosity, the sense 
of openness and camaraderie. I suppose its rather strange that Im a member of the American Association of Woodturners, as 
Im not an American, but then I guess thats what Ive always liked about the AAW, its a great big worldwide family that embraces 
inclusiveness.
  Japanese artist Satoshi Fujinuma rst encountered artistic woodturning in 1993 while traveling in New Zealand. Three 
years later, he began to teach himself the craft, unable to nd information on the process in Japan. His sister, who was living in 
Kentucky, sent him a copy of American Woodturner. He joined the AAW and in 1998, one of his works was selected for Pathways, 
the AAWs second international juried exhibition, presented at the Cleveland State University Art Gallery. The same year, Fujinuma 
attended his rst AAW symposium. I was surprised by how large the symposium was and the work that was being created, 
Fujinuma says. At the time, I was creating functional works, but I saw sculptural works that were created on the lathe, and that 
made a major impression on me. I realized that woodturning represented a means of creative freedom, and my eyes were opened 
to the potential.
  Alain Mailland of France was similarly surprised by the size and diversity of the AAW symposiums. I was really surprised 
to see so many people interested in woodturning, Mailland recalls of his rst AAW symposium. Like everything in the USA, it was 
really big. I joined the AAW and demonstrated at many symposiums. My experience with the AAW made it clear how important 
gathering so many peoplecraftsmen, artists, collectors, and curatorscan be. The AAW symposiums are an important place 
to meet with others and share your work.
  The experiences of Graeme Priddle, Satoshi Fujinuma, and Alain Mailland are similar to hundreds of others, making 
it clear that the AAW has been vital to the expansion of the eld of woodturning, aesthetically and globally. The inclusive spirit of 
the organization has resulted in a diverse group of individuals who have a shared love of the process and material.
  Many artists in the eld come from backgrounds in woodworking. Germanys Hans Weissog studied his craft through 
a  traditional  apprentice  system.  He  began  with  a  three-year  apprenticeship  in  mechanical  engineering,  eventually  becoming  a 
mechanical engineering technician. With a growing interest in design, he attended Fachhochschule Hildesheim/Holzminden for 
several years, studying with a professor who was a well-known woodturner and responsible for woodturning apprenticeships in 
Germany. It was interesting for me to see how many people are involved in the woodturning eld, Weissog says of attending his 
rst AAW symposium. Collectors, writers, editors, wood dealers, toolmakers, and gallery owners are all part of the woodturning 
community, and Im happy to be a part of it.
The World Turns: AAW@25
  Other artists who were rst exposed to the eld through traditional woodworking experience include Merete Larsen of 
Denmark, who began her career working as a cabinetmaker and antique furniture restorer. Irelands  Liam Flynn came from a 
family with generations of woodworkers, and Eli Avisera earned a degree in woodworking in Israel. Others came from assorted 
backgrounds, which ultimately inuenced their work: Butch Smuts, a former wildlife ecologist from South Africa; and American 
J. Paul Fennell, a retired mission, rocket performance, and orbital mechanics analyst in the Apollo space program.
  The stylistic range of work is equally expansive, from the eccentric work of French artists Alain Mailland and Pascal 
Oudet, who both expand the language of sculpture, to Louise Hibbert of Wales, who creates containers informed by aspects of 
the natural world that are normally overlooked or unseen by the naked eye. Nationality reveals no cohesive inuences, however, 
as works by Bert Marsh and Joey Richardson of England make clear. Marsh, who died recently, spent his lifetime exploring 
elegant bowl and vessel forms, while Richardson embraces a sculptural and mixed-media approach. Similarly, artists working in 
the United States might share medium and process, but their visual languages are varied. Todd Hoyer creates vessel forms that 
speak of the human condition, revealing the hidden interiors through what might be viewed as aws in the wood, while Jacques 
Vesery creates highly detailed sculptures that marry repetitive pattern and proportion.
  Binh Pho learned the craft of woodturning after immigrating to the United States from Vietnam and soon after began 
to explore its potential as an art form, employing a process of piercing and airbrushing to vessels. Pho has been involved with 
the AAW from the beginning of his career, teaching at symposia and now serving on the AAW Board of Directors. The AAW had 
foreign members before the Internet, even though there was not much communication among international woodturners outside 
of traveling to conferences, Pho says. In the woodturning world, we are willing to share our techniques, and this is the motivation 
for  many  international  woodturners  to  join  the  AAW.  Continuing  that  mass  communication  through  the  Internet  has  made  the 
world smaller for our community. The AAWs international membership is growing at a fast pace, currently at 981 members from 
72 different countries.
  Terry Martin also notes this growth, There were contemporary turners before the AAW was formed, but there were never 
so many, so well-organized, and so committed to the single aim of promoting turning. The AAW has become the largest and most 
signicant driver of the woodturning agenda in the world.
  Studio wood artists forever changed the lathe from a craftsmens tool into a creative instrument, adds William Hunter, 
but  the  AAW  had  an  organizational  appeal  that  helped  create  the  international  cross-pollination  of  woodturning.  Stephen 
Hogbin comments, Culture is built from the ground up, from a sense of place, and the physical environment. There is also a great 
tradition of the maker traveling, sharing knowledge, and learning new approaches.
This is the heart of the AAWfrom a gathering of like-minded people in Tennessee to international members attending annual 
symposiathe sharing, learning, and connecting through self-expression keeps the woodturning world turning.
Kevin  Wallace  is  Director  of  the  Beatrice  Wood  Center  for  the  Arts  in  Ojai,  California,  and  the  author  of  numerous  books  on 
contemporary craft art.
The World Turns: AAW@25
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Eli Avisera
Israel
Shalom
Wishing Peace for the World
Year: 2011
Materials: Olive, ebony & silver
Dimensions: 7 h x 3 dia
Photo Credit: Gene Colley
Sphere
David Ellsworth
AAW Honorary Life Member
United States
Year: 2010
Materials: Spalted Sugar Maple
Dimensions: 11 h X 11 dia.
Photo Credit: Artist
Lattice in the Clouds
J. Paul Fennell
United States
Year: 2011
Materials: Mesquite
Dimensions: 7 1/2 h X 8 1/4 dia.
Photo Credit: Artist
Spine Vessel
Liam Flynn
Ireland
Year: 2011
Materials: Oak
Dimensions: 8 h X 11 dia.
Photo Credit: Artist
Satoshi Fujinuma
Japan
Biota Grouping
Year: 2010
(left to right)
Japanese clethra, 4 h x 2 4/5 w x 2 4/5 d
maple, 2 7/10 h x 7 w x 2 2/5 d
birch, 4 7/10 h x 4 7/10 w x 1 d
Photo Credit: Artist
Macrodontia Box
Louise Hibbert
Wales
Year: 2011
Materials: English sycamore, silver, stainless steel, 
resin, texture paste, emulsion paint, crackle glaze 
and acrylic inks
Dimensions: 5 3/4 h X 2 1/2 w X 1 1/2 d
Photo Credit: Artist
Steven Hogbin
England, active Canada
Cornucopia Revisited
Year: 2011
Materials: Horse chestnut
Dimensions: 8 h X 18 w X 17 d
Photo Credit: Michael McLuhan
Scribble
Michael Hosaluk
Canada
Year: 2011
Materials: Maple, acrylics, 
charcoal and graphite
Dimensions: 17 h X 6 dia
Photo Credit: Trent Watts
Untitled
Todd Hoyer
United States
Year: 2011
Materials: Grapefruit wood and steel
Dimensions: 16 h X 9 dia
Photo Credit: Artist
William Hunter
United States
Free Vessel
Year: 2003 
Materials: Cocobolo
Dimensions: 12 h X 14 w X 18 d
Photo Credit: Hap Sakwa
Merete Larsen
Denmark
Untitled
Year: 2009
Materials: Beech and acrylic paint
Dimensions: 8 h X 9 1/2 dia
Photo Credit: Jacob Lerche
Mark Lindquist
AAW Honorary Life Member 
United States
Jordan Tree, Like the River
Year: 2011
Materials: Spalted sugar maple
Dimensions: 10 1/2 h X 10 1/2 dia
Photo Credit: Artist
Touch of Zen 2
Alain Mailland
France
Year: 2010
Materials: Locust burl
Dimensions: 6 1/2 h X 8 1/2 dia.
Photo Credit: Artist
Natural Edge Bowl
Year: 2006
Materials: Robinia 
Dimensions: 6 1/4 h X 8 1/2 w X 6 d
Photo Credit: David Peters
Bert Marsh
England
Coral Spawning
Terry Martin
Australia
Year: 2011
Materials: Jacaranda
Dimensions: 12 h X 17 w X 3 d
Photo Credit: Artist
Dendrochronology: 2010
Pascal Oudet
France
Year: 2011
Materials: Oak, turned, sandblasted, bleached
Dimensions: 2 1/2 h X 15 w X 12 1/2 d
Photo Credit: Artist
Sacred Journey
Binh Pho
Vietnam, active United States
Year: 2011
Materials: Boxelder, 22k gold leaf,  
and acrylic paint
Dimensions: 15 h X 8 dia.
Photo Credit: Artist
Graeme Priddle
New Zealand
Year: 2009
Materials: Cypress burl
Dimensions: 8 h X 4 w X 3 1/2 d
Photo Credit: Artist
Starfish
Vessel
Six Years
Joey Richardson
England
Year: 2011
Materials: Sycamore and acrylic colors
Dimensions: 12 h X 8 w X 8 d
Photo Credit: Artist
Boardwalk
Vaughn Richmond
Australia
Year: 2011
Materials: Jacaranda, jarrah, bronze, industrial diamonds, 
acrylic paints and 23k gold leaf
Dimensions: 1 1/2 h X 16 dia
Photo Credit: Artist
Neil Scobie
Australia
Ebb Tide
Year: 2011
Materials: White beech and aluminum 
Dimensions: 8 3/4 h X 32 w X 1 3/4 d
Photo Credit: Terry Martin
Base Metal
Butch Smuts
South Africa
Year: 2010
Materials: Jacaranda, 
copper, pyrography 
and stain
Dimensions: 
25 h X 12 dia
Photo Credit: Artist
Al Stirt
AAW Honorary Life Member
United States
Erosion Series #1
Year: 2011
Materials: Cherry with black milk paint
Dimensions: 8 h X 7 1/2 w X 2 1/2 d
Photo Credit: Artist
Dont Make Waves
Jacques Vesery
United States
Year: 2010
Materials: Ash, cherry and acrylics
Dimensions: 1 h X 21 w X 3 1/2 d
Photo Credit: Artist
Hans Weissflog
Germany
Stars
Year: 2011
Materials: Cocobolo
Dimensions: 2 1/2 h X 10 5/8 dia.
Photo Credit: Artist
Woodturning Today: 
A Dramatic Evolution
Be inspired by 25 years of craft.
The AAW 25th Anniversary book, Woodturning Today: A Dramatic Evolution
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Receive this limited deluxe edition of Woodturning Today: A Dramatic Evolution
When you become a Patron of the AAW you are making 
a statement of support and showing your commitment to 
the art and craft of woodturning.
All limited deluxe editions of Woodturning Today are housed in a 
custom-made box which includes an original work of wood art. As 
a Patron you can select anyone from a list of thirty internationally 
recognized artists to create this unique piece for your book.
For more information about becoming a 
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Art work created by J. Paul Fennell 
Photo: John Slemp
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ART  &  DESI GN
CHICAGO
The World Turns: AAW@25 
Encore at the AAW Gallery of Wood Art 
Saint Paul, MN 
November 13th - December 30th, 2011
222 Landmark Center
75 W. 5th Street
Saint Paul MN 55102
www.galleryofwoodart.org
651-484-9094
Gallery Hours:
Tues - Fri 11am - 4pm
Sun: 12pm - 3pm
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The Gallery of Wood Art is 
sponsored by the American 
Association of Woodturners 
and has received additional 
assistance  from  the  Saint 
Paul Cultural STAR program 
and  the  Minnesota  State 
Arts Board