Articles / Editorials

The Gallery in the Media

The Gallery and its exhibitions are often featured in publications such as Australian Wood Review, Craft Art International Magazine, Capital Magazine, The Canberra Times, 716 Craft Australia Newsletter, and a wide variety of media such as ArtSound FM and ABC Radio, Prime and Win Television.

The following pages from time to time feature current and past articles and editorial from media entities and from the Gallery’s Artistic Director and Exhibitions Coordinator.

The content is intended for public consumption and for educational purposes. In some cases they will feature the facility to comment on issues raised in those articles and editorials. The content may also be protected by copyright of the publishers, the Gallery and individual authors and permission should be sought before reproducing, quoting or copying.



Media Links


www.artsound.com.au


www.woodreview.com.au

www.craftarts.com.au

www.capitalmagazine.com.au


www.craftaustralia.com.au

Studio Furniture 2008

Craft Australia 716 craft·design ISSN:1835-1832 Issue 029 April 2008

Studio Furniture 2008 was initiated by David MacLaren, Artistic Director of Bungendore Wood Works Gallery, as a way to foster the production of unique pieces of furniture by makers and to highlight the important role of commercial galleries. Stan d'Argeavel presents an overview of the competition and exhibition with images of the winning works.

Articles - 31 March 2008
Studio Furniture 2008

Studio Furniture 2008 opened at Bungendore Wood Works Gallery on Australia Day, 26th January. The exhibition was initiated by David MacLaren, Artistic Director of the Gallery, as a way to foster the production of unique pieces of furniture by makers. The criteria for the exhibition was that the work be

Things of Tone and Wood

Canberra Times, Times 2, Friday 25th January, 2008

by Ron Cerabona

Furniture can be regarded as simply functional: somewhere to, literally, hang your hat, or put up your feet, or eat dinner, or just sink down in front of the television after a hard day at work. But the best of it is more than that. It can also be a work of art, something to admire in and of itself.

Bungendore Wood Works Gallery wanted to do something to encourage this latter perception and to give craftspeople a chance to display their talents, with the opening exhibition in their 25th anniversary year, Studio Furniture 2008, which opens tomorrow.

Exhibition coordinator Stan d'Argeavel says, "It's a bit of special exhibition. We decided to encourage makers to do some furniture slightly on the edge of the envelope... Furniture can be slightly straightforward. In Studio Furniture, we wanted to go on the edge on the line, on the cutting edge of design ... a little bit different, something you don't see often."

Celebrating Two Decades of Fine Woodworking in Australia

Craft Arts International Magazine #60 2004

by Terry Martin

In 1977 a young furniture maker named David Mac Laren arrived in Australia from New York. He had a fulfilling life as a furniture maker in America, but he became disillusioned with pervasive materialism and came to Australia to try to establish a more meaningful life. Like many at that time, he dreamt of self-sufficiency, so he bought rural land near the village of Bungendore, 30 minutes from Canberra, and set up his workshop. Eventually Mac Laren decided to open a gallery because he wanted a place to display his furniture and pieces by other furniture makers. It was a simple desire that gave no hint of the success and expansion of the coming years.

In September, 1983 Mac Laren rented the old Bungendore General Store and shortly afterwards opened Bungendore Wood Works Gallery (BWWG) with the first exhibition, "Perspectives in American Black Walnut". It featured furniture by local makers who used timber he had brought from the US. It was a modest start, but the gallery grew steadily, both in reputation and in the range of work it presented.

The Art of Relationship

Canberra Review/Canberra Times, February 12, 2000

by Stan d'Argeavel

Its a long, long way from the Off-Broadway theatre stage to the quiet, secluded streets and lanes of Bungendore village and an even further distance from successful playwright to fine wood worker and gallery director. Bungendore Wood Works Gallery owner and artistic director David Mac Laren revels in just that.

“When I moved from New York City to Bungendore I wanted a place to display my furniture as well as the work of other furniture makers in the region.” says David.

And it’s this relationship with his designer/makers that David now finds the most challenging and enjoyable facet of running one of this country’s finest mixed media galleries - all in a sleepy little village in the Southern Tablelands of NSW.

“Its a very fragile set of circumstances that controls the lives of the makers and artists that provides the life-blood of the commercial gallery,” says Mac Laren “and I am extremely proud of achieving a special working relationship with makers.”

Don Burrows invites you to Stop, Look and Listen

Capital Magazine Issue Twenty Five November - December 2006

by Stan d'Argeavel

A brief look around the walls of Australian jazz musician Don Burrows' studio reveals an impressive portrait of success and recognition in the music business. Looking further reveals the fact that a second artistic medium pervades his creative life.

Burrows is equally at home in the photographic darkroom as he is on the stage. To be blessed with a talent at a level few artists attain is one thing, to carry that talent to a second artistic medium is reserved for a few gifted individuals.

Don Burrows has been treading the boards as a professional musician for 65 years. In 1973 the twice-named Australian Living Treasure received the first Gold Record ever awarded to an Australian jazz musician, instigated the first Jazz studies program in the Southern Hemisphere at the NSW Conservatorium of Music and was awarded an MBE.

In 1987 he was awarded the Order of Australia (AO) and in 2000 received the coveted Sir Bernard Heinze Award for service to Australia, a rare honour for a musician. In the same year he was awarded the first of his three honorary doctorates.

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