Friday, February 20, 2009

A New Schule

I will start by saying that I credit my own teachers--especially Tom Eltang--for taking the time to help me develop my skills some ten or so years ago. This is not a process that took place over the course of an afternoon or weekend, but rather several years. Because of Tom's generosity, I feel and have felt a sense of obligation to share my own expertise with other aspiring carvers. Over the years, I've had the pleasure of working with and helping to supplement the skill sets of some very talented carvers, including Jeff Gracik, Brad Pohlmann, Adam Davidson, and Steve Morisette. These are guys who desperately wanted to learn, and to create. All of them had aspirations of becoming professional carvers--actually moving from hobbyists to working artists, and I would affirm that this is fundamentally different than simply wanting to make a few nice looking pipes each year.

Two rusticated Cutties. This is the first shape Tom ever taught me to make.


Love Geiger, a Swedish pipemaker who himself made his way from talented hobbyist to full-time professional recently said this about the journey.

" I believe that if you are serious about making pipes and really learning you will seek the live advice of a professional, by one on one interaction or spending the cash to visit them..

In this time we don't have the luxury of real apprenticeship, but just visiting a maker you look up to for a day or a few hours will grant so much more and give you a feeling what it takes and is like making pipes for a living.

So many have romantic dreams of "making it" and living off selling their smokable art but more have failed than succeeded in this, because it isn’t easy even with natural talent ect.
It requires discipline, luck, good connections and living on a tight budget for years for most of us. And even then there are no guarantees.

The sooner one gets a feeling of how it really is like " living with pipes" behind the glamour and $1000+ pipes they can set their goal on what level they would like to achieve and what they want to get out of it..Frustration and poverty is no fun... having a good hobby can be much more rewarding for most..

I know of very few if any professionals who have not in some way at some point visited other more experienced makers to learn.. I've done so a few times and intend to do so again as for me it is so inspiring and a kick in the butt to get productive.

Personally it took me 3 years of fooling around in the shop and wasting money on the "wrong" tools and methods before I finally did and even if it might cost you a plane ticket in the long run money could be saved.. "

I think there's great wisdom in what Love has to say here. Being a real live working artist is not easy. Those who imagine otherwise are simply delusional. It is a great blessing to make a living doing something that you love, but it requires sacrifice, often financial sacrifice, and far more dedication than most ever imagine. It also requires great skill, a very keen eye, and an understanding--innate or developed--of fundamental design principles. If you want to make pipes successfully you're going to have to develop these skills. This is not something that happens overnight, and it is not something that can happen simply by poking around on internet bulletin boards. 

New pipemakers are "made" by older pipemakers, not by self-important collectors, not by eBay, and not by themselves. In the Presbyterian church, an individual with a call to ministry is said to be "under the care" of his/her presbytery. This is a process that ensures an individual is provided with the necessary care, encouragement, wisdom, and example to succeed. I would advocate a similar model for aspiring pipemakers, and encourage other established pipemakers to engage in the process as tutors. 

Pipemaking is a dying art. In the past decade we have lost Sixten Ivarsson, Bo Nordh, and Jorn Micke. Poul Rasmussen has been gone for many years now. More recently Peter Hedegaard has died. Much of what is known and passed on about pipemaking lies in the hands and heads of masters who have been taught by masters. The only way for that knowledge to continue is to train new masters, and to that I am resolutely committed. 

2 comments:

  1. This is a fantastic post--thank you very much for publishing it!

    Perhaps pipe making is a dying art in a sense--we have certainly lost several wonderful, and highly influential pipe makers in recent years. But I would argue that we have remaining with us their work, the pipes they poured their souls into creating, and even more importantly, we have a body of skills and a passion successfully passed on to the next generation. Pipe makers like Lars, Nanna, like Tom, and like you and Love and many others who are likewise passionate about seeing it continue. I have every confidence that pipe making is not a dying art, but one that has been carefully entrusted to the next generation.

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  2. This is a great "jumping off" point
    for aspiring pipe makers to begin their serious consideration of what is involved in the commitment to an art form.
    I can attest to Todd's resolute adherence to the values, attitudes
    and responsibilities he discusses here.
    He has been a great mentor, inspiration and cheerleader for me and that experience has been truly priceless to me.
    We have also become friends, a benefit I treasure. I've made a living all my life as an "artist"
    of some kind: musician, photographer and now, God willing, pipe maker.
    I can tell you all that the best part of playing was with musicians that were far more advanced that I was. The best part of photography is working with art directors with a vast and highly developed vision
    that exceeds my own and the best part of pipe making, so far, is
    watching a guy like Todd turn a raw block into a symphony of curves and then a finished pipe that will stand (and smoke) with the best ever made.
    What I have noticed about all truly
    fine artists in any field is their integrity; with the medium, with themselves and with the world.

    Thanks Todd.

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