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In September we hosted our third annual summer school. This year we collaborated with the V&A museum and specifically the Make Good: Rethinking Material Futures to create ‘Field Notes’. The work of the 12 practitioners taking part in the summer school is now on display in the V&A’s Susan R Weber Furniture Gallery.

in May 2022 the V&A and Sylva Foundation launched an open call to invite creative practitioners with an interest in wood as a material, and forests and woodlands as a place for learning and growing, to apply. We were particularly interested in applications from disabled people and people from Black, Asian and minority ethnic backgrounds, and from people who identify as queer or female as these groups are currently under-represented in the fields of forestry, design and making in wood.

We received more than 100 applications. After a selection and interview process overseen by the V&A and Sylva Foundation, with external support from designer and educator Huren Marsh, 12 practitioners within art, design and architecture were selected. They are: Georgina Bowman, Beatrix Bray, Rachel Cox, Krupa C. Desai, George Fereday, Hannah-Lily Lanyon, Nia Manoylo, Phoebe Oldfield, Henrique J. Paris, Matthew Rosier, Alisa Ruzavina and Adam Stanford.

 

The Summer School was initiated with a week of inspirational online talks, seminars and mentoring sessions in August followed by a week in person at the Sylva Wood School in September. This week was a very special experience for everyone involved.

There were talks by curators, makers, conservators, foresters and arborists. There were forest walks, tree pruning sessions, milling of timber and hands-on making. All of these activities were underpinned by an open and ongoing discussion, with visiting experts and spending five days together. Each day started with the group assembling to share reflections from the previous day and ended with a communal dinner in Sylva Foundation’s Teaching Barn.

The brief for the summer school participants was to explore under-utilised, home-grown timber, and looking at issues of land use and ownership; management of forests; and questions of access and inclusion. As such each of the resulting projects was shaped by the practitioners’ own experiences.

All wood used during the summer school was sourced with the help of our partners, forestry charity, Grown in Britain. We provided a range of kiln-dried timbers, Alder, Ash, Douglas fir, Elm and Sweet Chestnut along with some freshly felled Ash and Birch from the Blenheim Estate. This offered the opportunity to explore the characteristics as well as the stories connected with them. We are very pleased that all of the timber used was certified as Grown in Britain guaranteeing its provenance.

The carefully curated display of the outcomes at the V&A act as a collection of ‘field notes’ that gather comments, questions and critical outputs regarding the future of forests and forestry. Rather than complete projects, they can be seen as prompts that invite further investigation and discussion. It looks amazing and we encourage you all to visit and let us know what you think – it will be on display until October 2023.

We would like to thank; Johanna Agerman-Ross, Maude Willaerts and Danilo Marques dos Reis from the V&A for driving the project forward and being great to work with. Dougal Driver and Rachel Lawrence from Grown in Britain for their ongoing support of our Summer Schools. All of the contributors during the two weeks, Huren Marsh, Dana Melchar, Sumitra Upham, Sharon Durdant-Hollamby, Mac Collins, Hattie Speed, Lynn Jones, Anthony Dain and Rae Sellen. Our Sylva Foundation team: Joe Bray, Phillip Gullam, Gabriel Hemery, Paul Orsi, and George Dennison. And finally, John Makepeace OBE for his support of the Make Good: Rethinking Material Futures and for sharing his knowledge and vast experience with us all over the two incredible weeks of learning.

“Without doubt this year’s Summer School has been the most amazing experience of my teaching career. Bringing together so many brilliant young people, from diverse backgrounds and creative fields then prompting them with inspiring talks, walks and access to our workshops and experienced teachers has led to twelve very special outcomes. Anyone interested in the future of our forests and the opportunities of using homegrown timber should definitely go and see the inspiring display.”

Make Good exhibition - a collaboration between the V&A and Sylva Foundation

Make Good exhibition – a collaboration between the V&A and Sylva Foundation. Photo Gabriel Hemery

Sylva Foundation has teamed up with the National Trust to turn trees lost to Ash dieback into a range of hand-crafted stools.

The ash stools made at the Sylva Wood School in collaboration with the National Trust

The ash stools made at the Sylva Wood School in collaboration with the National Trust ©National Trust Images/Arnhel de Serra

Ash dieback is a widespread fungal disease that has had a dramatic impact on the UK’s native ash. It causes trees to slowly die and drop limbs, and those trees which pose a risk to the public have to be felled. Wood from this process has been turned into a collection of bespoke stools in three different designs, each made from ash trees from the National Trust’s Ebworth Estate in Gloucestershire. The Ebworth Estate was given to the National Trust, by John Workman, who was considered as one of the most influential foresters of his generation. Part of the estate is dedicated to the education, learning, and development of rural skills and works in partnership with other organisations; such as Sylva Foundation.

For the furniture making students of Sylva Foundation’s Wood School, working on this commission from the National Trust, allowed them to gain real business experience, as the stools will be sold via the National Trust’s online shop. The donation of the Grown in Britain certified timber from the National Trust also provided Sylva Foundation with materials that otherwise would have to be purchased. This ensures that the course is as cost efficient as possible, along with bursaries offered to students by the foundation.

National Trust Head of Trees and Woodland, John Deakin commented on the collaboration:

“I’m so pleased we’ve been able to work with Sylva Foundation and turn the sad loss of our trees into something so positive. This is a great example of how we can manage our woodlands in a positive way, if and when the worst happens. Ash dieback is one of the biggest threats to our native woodlands in the UK with ash making up nearly 40% of composition.

“As a conservation charity, we are so reliant on the skills of experts, some of whom are incredibly rare in their field, so by helping Sylva Foundation – both in terms of materials and business training – we are contributing to the future of skilled craftspeople.

“I hope that we can work with the foundation in future years and continue to offer these development opportunities, as well as find practical uses for the resources we have in abundance.”

Sylva Foundation CEO, Dr Gabriel Hemery, said

“The collaboration with the National Trust has been a wonderful opportunity for the charity and a brilliant live project for students at the Sylva Wood School. Our students have learnt a huge amount about working with ash, and how to design and batch-produce quality products to meet with a commercial deadline.

“The outcomes will help us promote the multiple benefits that result from using more home-grown timber from well-managed forests. After all, whatever the motive for felling (sadly in this case due to disease), home-grown timber is good for nature, good for the economy, and good for the planet.”

The stools are now available exclusively through the National Trust online shop.

All images ©National Trust Images/Arnhel de Serra


Notes for Editors:

About the Ebworth Estate

The Ebworth Estate was given to the National Trust, by John Workman, who was a National Trust forestry advisor for 30 years, co-founder of the Tree Council and co-founder of the Friends of Westonbirt Arboretum, as well as ex-president of the Royal Forestry Society (RFS).

About the National Trust

The National Trust is a conservation charity founded in 1895 by three people: Octavia Hill, Sir Robert Hunter and Hardwicke Rawnsley, who saw the importance of the nation’s heritage and open spaces and wanted to preserve them for everyone to enjoy. Today, across England, Wales and Northern Ireland, we continue to look after places so people and nature can thrive. Entirely independent of Government, the National Trust cares for more than 250,000 hectares of countryside, 780 miles of coastline and 500 historic properties, gardens and nature reserves.

About Sylva Foundation

Sylva Foundation is an environmental and forestry charity working for a society that cares for nature while living in harmony with it. We envisage a wood culture where people understand and promote the good stewardship of woodlands and are mindful of their utility, while being conscious of their fragility. We use our forestry knowledge and information technology skills, supported by state-of-art evidence, to provide innovative solutions to some of the greatest environmental challenges facing modern society. Sylva’s myForest platform supports landowners and managers responsible for more than 155,000ha of forests across Britain. At our home in south Oxfordshire, we host the Sylva Wood School and a centre supporting small businesses who make with home-grown timber.

Sylva Foundation’s views on sourcing and using home-grown wood products.

Using more wood products sourced from UK forests will stimulate our economy while improving the environmental condition of more woodlands, reducing wood-miles (carbon footprint of importing timber), and help reconnect people with the benefits of a working countryside.

Sylva Foundation has set out its views on sourcing and home-grown wood products, and articulated how these link to its charitable purpose in a new position statement: Sourcing and Using Home-Grown Wood Products. The position statement also sets out a number of actions which it commits to following and will advocate to others. The position statement can be downloaded here.

 

Home-Grown Wood Procurement - decision tree

Home-Grown Wood Procurement – decision tree

Context

  • Sylva Foundation’s vision is for a society that cares for nature while living in harmony with it.
  • Much of the UK’s wildlife has adapted to thrive in managed forests.
  • Currently there is low awareness of the provenance of wood products among users and consumers, and therefore a lack of awareness of the resulting consequences for the environment and economy.
  • There is a perception among UK users of wood products that supply is limited and/or that quality is poor.

Our Actions

Sylva Foundation position statement on sourcing and using home-grown wood products

download the position statement

Sylva Foundation will:

  1. advocate a hierarchal approach, placing a preference for home-grown wood products above some certified wood products.
  2. develop and make freely available a decision support tool to aid good environmental and ethical decision making by users of wood products (see below).
  3. be proactive in supporting the mission and activities of Grown in Britain.
  4. explore how best to improve the UK woodchain.

Home-grown Wood Product Selector tool

Sylva Foundation has developed a beta version of a Home-Grown Wood Product Selector decision support tool. This tool is provided free to use and aims to guide wood product users in decision making for sourcing timber and wood products in the UK. Sylva Foundation aims to develop this tool further with support from partners, and if investment can be attracted, develop a simple mobile application to improve accessibility and user experience.

home-grown wood product selector tool

home-grown wood product selector tool

 


Background

The area of woodland in the UK is estimated to be 3.2M hectares (13%); meaning that it is the second least-wooded country in Europe. A significant proportion of woodland area (44%) has been certified under the UK Woodland Assurance Scheme. However, a similar area of woodland (e.g. 42% in England) is without a management plan compliant with the UK Forestry Standard (UKFS). Such non-compliant UKFS woodlands may be failing to deliver benefits to society, the environment, and to the UK economy.

The UK is the second largest importer of timber of any country in the world (second only to China), including 7.2M m3 of sawnwood and 5.3M tonnes of pulp and paper, amounting to £7.5 billion worth of imports . From its own forests, the UK produces 3.3M m3 of sawnwood, 3.0M m3 of wood-based panels, and 3.6M m3 of paper product.

It may seem obvious that a country with low woodland cover may be reliant on timber imports for much of its needs, however the current low level of woodland management in the UK is a real concern. Not only does a reliance on wood product imports leads to significant carbon footprint due to transportation (‘wood-miles’), but the under-performance of the UK timber market means that woodland owners may remain unmotivated to improve the condition of their woodlands, or even to invest in creating new woodland. Good woodland management (as measured against the UKFS) is closely linked not only to the economy, but also to the environmental condition of our woodlands.

The V&A and Sylva Foundation are hosting a summer school and inviting creative practitioners to take part. The Field Notes project will provide a unique opportunity for those with an interest in wood as a material, and in forests and woodlands as a place for learning and growing.

.

Summer School 2022

For Sylva Foundation, the collaboration is an extension to its ongoing support of a Summer School. Head of the Sylva Wood School, Joseph Bray, commented:

“We are excited to be collaborating with the V&A this year, especially because of the amazing opportunity it will provide to the creative participants in having their work displayed at the museum. The Field Notes project will help meet some of our core aims at the Wood School in creating inspiring experiences and opportunities for young people to experience making with home-grown timber.”

For the V&A, the collaboration supports the second iteration of Make Good: Rethinking Material Futures programme. Curator of Twentieth Century and Contemporary Furniture and Product Design at the V&A, Johanna Agerman Ross, said:

“We are delighted to continue the 10-year Make Good programme with this summer school in collaboration with Sylva Foundation. It will be exciting to see what this summer school will bring in terms of interrogating the use of wood and natural materials in design and how the participants will reflect in the themes and questions we have proposed as a starting point.”

The outcome of the Project will be an object or series of objects made from underutilised homegrown timber and other natural materials, sourced locally on the Sylva Wood Centre site. These will be contextualised with reflections on the summer-school learning process in the form of imagery, spoken or written word, film or performance.

Sylva Summer School

Sylva Summer School

The Field Notes summer school is open to anyone over the age of 18 with an interest in making. As the Wood School at Sylva Foundation is equipped with industry- standard wood working tools this is a great environment for people to further develop professional making skills. Some prior experience of using wood working tools being would be a benefit to participants. There are eight places available for makers wishing to explore making in wood. This is an opportunity suitable for students, recent graduates, or early-career practitioners.

There are a further four places for embedded observers, to learn from and capture the programme in some format other than making in wood, for example through writing, sketching, podcast making, film making, or photography. This is an opportunity suitable for students, recent graduates, or early-career practitioners. Mentors will be available to all participants, to help realise the different projects.

Field Notes

Field Notes

All applications will be treated equally, regardless of age, disability, gender identity or gender expression, race, ethnicity, religion or belief, sex, sexual orientation, or any other equality characteristic. We encourage applications from disabled people and people from Black, Asian and minority ethnic backgrounds, and from people who identify as queer or female as these groups are currently under-represented in the fields of forestry, design and making in wood.

For an overview of the Field Notes summer school, please read the full call-out here.

An application form is available below. If you have any difficulties viewing the application form, you can also access the form here.

DEADLINE 11th JULY 2022.

 


 

We are delighted to welcome Phillip Gullam as our new Wood School Assistant.

Phillip Gullam - Wood School Assistant

Phillip Gullam – Wood School Assistant

Phil previously taught at Rycotewood for a number of years, teaching various furniture-making courses. He brings to the role a breadth of experience gained over the years.  Phil has been involved in the teaching and assessing qualifications for wood occupations for more than 15 years. Most recently this was as the nationwide quality assurer of furniture qualifications and as an assessor of furniture-making apprenticeships. Prior to this, he was a workshop manager for several high-profile furniture/kitchen makers, and has successfully run his own workshop.

Commenting on his appointment, Phil said:

‘I am excited by the opportunity to work with Sylva’s students and help develop their furniture making skills and knowledge, using homegrown timbers, and to be involved in Sylva Foundation’s wider projects.’

Read more about the Sylva Wood School

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SYLVA

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England and Wales 1128516
and in Scotland SC041892

Company limited by guarantee 06589157

Copyright © 2009-24 Sylva Foundation. All rights reserved.

 
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