Art Restart
Woodworker and furniture-maker Aspen Golann likes having rules to both heed and push back against in her craft, but she's also working to toss out the rules of who's been traditionally welcomed into the wood shop.
Woodworker, furniture-maker, artist and educator Aspen Golann trained at the renowned North Bennet Street School in Boston and specializes in building furniture with the techniques of 18th and 19th century American fine woodworking. Her pieces aren’t mere modern iterations of a centuries-old tradition, however. They also often exhibit very modern feminist touches that acknowledge and subvert the power and function of furniture, traditionally made by men, that is created for domestic spaces, historically the domain of women.
Aspen’s work has earned her the admiration of the arts-and-crafts establishment. Her work has been featured in American Craft magazine, Fine Woodworking magazine and Architectural Digest. In 2020 she was the recipient of the Mineck Furniture Fellowship from the Society of Arts and Crafts, and this year The Maxwell Hanrahan Foundation gave her one of its prestigious $100,000 unrestricted Awards in Craft. She teaches at the Rhode Island School of Design and in national and international craft workshops.
Three years ago, thanks in part to the Minreck Fellowship, Aspen created The Chairmaker’s Toolbox, a three-pronged project that provides free tools, education and mentorship for BIPOC, gender-expansive and female chair- and toolmakers seeking to build sustainable businesses.
Here Aspen describes how she herself homed in on her exact passion and explains the inventive ways in which The Chairmaker’s Toolbox makes a career in woodworking a little less daunting for craftspeople who have traditionally been excluded from the field.
https://www.aspengolann.com/