Kentucky Artisan Center at Berea

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Detail view :

Kentucky Artisan Center at Berea

Also by Rude Osolnik:

The Filson Historical Society
Macassar Ebony Bowl

Rhododendron Bowl


Macassar Ebony Bowl

Set of Candlesticks

From the collection of:
Kentucky Artisan Center at Berea || VAM Home

Rude Osolnik (Kentucky, 1915-2001)

MAHOGANY BOWL, 1968

Turned wood; 19" X 4"

On loan to the Kentucky Artisan Center

Master woodturner Rude Osolnik of Berea, Kentucky, was a major innovator whose technical mastery, creative lathe work, and pioneering vision profoundly influenced the evolution of contemporary woodturning in the latter half of the 20th century. This finely crafted bowl demonstrates Osolnik’s skill as a woodturner as well as the natural beauty of the mahogany wood he used.

About the Artist

The son of Slovenian immigrants, Rude Osolnik was born on March 4, 1915, in Dawson, New Rude 2Mexico. The family settled in Johnson City, Illinois, where a Swiss high school industrial arts teacher introduced Rude to woodturning in 1927.

After receiving a Bachelor of Arts degree from Bradley University, Osolnik worked for Caterpillar Tractors for a year. In 1937, he received an offer to teach at Berea College—for half the salary he was earning at Caterpillar. He accepted.

Osolnik remained at Berea for the next 40 years, guiding and influencing thousands of students. He also helped establish, and served as the first chairman of, Berea’s Industrial Arts Department. “To Osolnik, the process of creating and the sharing of this knowledge with others was what gave his life meaning,” gallery owner Martha Connell has said.


“My basic philosophy ... comes from a deep and abiding love of wood—its diversity, color, grain, and texture are constantly fascinating. Each piece is like a human fingerprint. No two pieces are alike.”


In 1938, Osolnik married Berea graduate Daphne Francis of Carr Creek, Kentucky. She was his partner not only in life but also in a business, Osolnik Originals, until her death in 1988. Except for his service in the United States Navy in the Pacific during World War II, Osolnik lived and worked in Berea for the rest of his life.

Osolnik supplemented his teacher’s salary by creating turned works for sale, rising early in the morning to get in several hours in the studio before heading to the college to teach. He was a prolific artist, crafting more than 150,000 of his signature candlesticks alone during the 1950s and ’60s. He also created a line of salad bowls, twig pots, rolling pins, lamps, tables, and other objects for sale at the fairs of the Southern Highland Craft Guild, an organization of which he was a founding member.

Over the years, Osolnik came to appreciate wood in all its forms and shapes. In his artist’s statement from a 1997 exhibition at the Connell Gallery in Atlanta, he said, “My basic philosophy of wood developed during a period of almost 50 years. It comes from a deep and abiding love of wood—its diversity, color, grain, and texture are constantly fascinating. Each piece is like a human fingerprint. No two pieces are alike.”

While Osolnik initially believed that he had to use flawless wood for his pieces, he later found uses for cast-off materials and developed innovative applications for time-honored techniques. He began experimenting with a lathe to make bowls that embraced imperfections such as cracks, voids, and bark inclusions. Deploring waste of any kind, he employed laminating techniques from industry and created a series of laminated works from discarded and reclaimed strips of birch plywood that he glued together to form blocks, from which the bowls were turned. His penchant for finding ingenious uses for cast-off materials and his innovative applications greatly influenced the direction of contemporary woodworking.

Osolnik’s unique laminated bowls are found in the permanent collections of such institutions as the Smithsonian’s Renwick Gallery, the Boston Museum of Fine Art, Atlanta’s High Museum, and the Speed Art Museum in Louisville. These bowls were produced in a variety of shapes and sizes, from large, spectacular forms that highlighted the striking circular pattern of the lamination to small, irregular bowls made from leftover corners of the largest blocks.

In the 1960s and ’70s, Osolnik was a leader of the Southern Highland Handicraft Guild and helped found the Kentucky Guild of Artists and Craftsmen. He was one of the architects of the Kentucky Guild Train promoting Kentucky crafts.

Osolnik directed the Berea College Woodcraft Industry, which manufactured custom furniture and home accessories, from 1975 to 1977. After retiring from the college in 1978, he continued working as an artist in addition to giving numerous workshops, demonstrations, and lectures throughout the country and abroad. In 1982, he started the ongoing July Berea Crafts Festival.

Often called the most versatile woodturner in America, Osolnik was widely recognized for his accomplishments. In 1950, he received the National Award for Contemporary Design from the International Wood Manufacturers Association. That was followed in 1955 by an award for Best Utilization of Waste Wood from the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. In 1992, the state of Kentucky honored him with the Governor’s Award for Lifetime Achievement in the Arts, and in 1994 he was named a Fellow of the American Crafts Council. In 1997, the Southern Highland Craft Guild, where he served as both president and treasurer, honored him with its Lifetime Achievement Award. Also, Wood magazine chose him as an original inductee into its Woodworking Hall of Fame.

Classroom Ideas

Discussion: Would you have guessed that this bowl was handcrafted? Why or why not? How do you think Osolnik was able to make his pieces so symmetrical and smooth? How important do you think the quality of the wood and the appearance of the wood grain are to the success of a work like this? Do you think this bowl is art? Why or why not?

Activity: Research mahogany. What type of wood is it? What parts of the world does it come from? What are traditional uses for this wood? Make a chart or display of different types of wood and their qualities, sources, rarity, and environmental aspects.

Links

Learn more about Rude Osolnik at the Rude Osolnik: Master Woodturner site.
[www.rudeosolnik.com]

Woodturning Online has articles, project instructions, and links to lots of other resources.
[www.woodturningonline.com]

See more works by Rude Osolnik at Woodturning Plus.
[www.woodturningplus.com/rude_osolnik1.htm]

Start your research on wood in the Wikipedia.
[en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood]