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No Test Pieces; Ambitious Wooden Sculpture with J. Bud Smith


Impressive Work

Students from J. Bud Smith’s recent Penland wood workshop are feeling surprised and justifiably impressed with themselves, having accomplished what once seemed daunting. During the four-day workshop, students created beautiful wooden animal sculptures from buckeye, walnut, and butternut, using chisels and knives. Some worked from Bud’s designs and others executed original work with guidance from their instructor about what could be accomplished during the workshop. “This group was ambitious,” said Bud. With four days to learn the technique and complete a finished piece, students quickly abandoned the possibility of a test piece, with impressive results. “This finished work is pretty dang sick for no test piece,” remarked student Leslie Bartoebaugh. We agree!

“Egret in Walnut” by Rene Almon

Artist and Educator

J. Bud Smith is a seasoned artist and educator. A native of Cherokee, North Carolina and a member of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, Bud first studied woodcarving at Cherokee High School under renowned artist Amanda Crowe and has been teaching makers of all ages since 1993. Bud’s native identity informs his work and teaching: the title of his Penland workshop was “Woodcarving: A Cherokee Perspective.”

As students began the workshop, they were both impressed and intimidated by the collection of finished work that their teacher brought with him. Beginning with blocks of wood, it was difficult to imagine that their finished work would look anything like Bud’s beautiful sculptures.

A work in progress by instructor J. Bud Smith

Trusting the Process

Students found Bud’s teaching style to be laid back with a touch of humor. Calm and assured, he allowed students to make mistakes and joked with them as they faced down crucial moments in the process, helping them to loosen up. He gently let them know when they were going against the grain, and when asked if they were doing it “right,” he would answer, “Whose sculpture is this?”


Student  Leslie Bartoebaugh described her experience like this:

At first my piece was so blocky and it was hard to imagine that it would look anything remotely similar to his work. But I feel like we just had to keep trusting the process, release control, and keep going farther than we thought we were supposed to.

Once we started going far enough, there were these moments where it was like ‘Oh my God it’s actually rounding out. I can start to see it.’

There’s a lot of self trust. You’ve got to go ahead and chisel more off and tell yourself it’s going to be ok.

“Whale in Walnut” by Kevin Mackoul

“Art People Need Each Other”

On the final day of the workshop, students visited on the wood studio porch before show-and-tell. Their finished work sat in the studio, carefully prepared for the short walk to the Northlight building. Thinking over the arc of their experience, they remarked on the benefits of learning such a challenging and meditative process in the company of others engaged in the same. “Art people need each other,” said one student. “Everyone wants to be here and to learn,” said another.

For Rene Almon, the collective experience was best expressed by the music that the studio full of industrious and ambitious humans produced as they experienced the different stages of the creative process. First, everyone was working with a chisel. “It was really good with everyone tap tap tapping,” she said. “There was a rhythm to it.” As the week went on, students transitioned from chisel to knife as they focused on the details of their work. “Over time it just came down to the sound of the knife,” she said.

“Anhinga in Walnut” by Leslie Bartlebaugh

“Duck in Buckeye” bu Sophie Simmons

We are very impressed with J. Bud Smith’s skill as an educator and with the work created during this workshop. Congratulations to all on a job well done!

Interested in working with wood at Penland? Check out our upcoming workshops HERE.

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A Very Good Swing in Penland Wood

There’s a beautiful new addition to the Penland Wood Studio, created during Ellie Richards’s spring concentration workshop “Freeform Furniture.”  Ryan Lutz’s bricklay laminated swing is here to stay, so next time you’re at Penland, be sure to try it out!

Here’s a review from wood studio coordinator Kyle Little, Penland’s wood studio coordinator,

It’s wild how we just don’t do the fun things we used to do as kids very often! I swung on it and it tickled my stomach and made me laugh out loud. Maybe we should all swing every morning and the world would be better off.

Thank you for this gift, Ryan! And for answering our questions:

How did you make this awesome swing?

It’s made using bricklay lamination. You pretty much make a ton of little trapezoids and then glue all those little trapezoids together kind of in a line so it’s like a skinny piece. So it’s made out of twelve of those skinny long curves and each one is routed to a template so it gets that nice clean shape. Then just put some rope in it and now we can have so much fun out of here.

What is it made of?

It’s made of maple and then the little colored sections are recycled skateboards.

It’s a prototype?

Kind of. I was using this to figure out the process of what I’m doing for my furniture piece. I wanted to make something smaller scale and Ellie suggested a swing and I thought that would be really fun.

What is the larger piece that this will lead to?

It’s a coffee table design and there’s a lot of curves in it. It will be a little more complex than this and definitely larger scale but maybe the same technique of a bricklay lamination.

How do you feel about leaving this swing here at Penland wood?

It’s so fun, it’s already gotten used so much. It’s nice to leave a little mark here that other people can enjoy.