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Carnota, Spain

Frank Buschmann

Woodworks Buschmann Bella
Cabinetmaker

An experimental philosophy

  • Frank wants to rediscover the forgotten values of craftsmanship
  • His furniture is purist in its approach and very demanding in its making
  • His professional life has been marked by an experimental spirit

German by origin, Frank Buschmann spent his childhood between South Africa and Nigeria, and his teenage and formative years between Germany and the Netherlands. Today, in Galicia, Spain, he uses the most traditional woodworking techniques to build his contemporary furniture that invites us to rediscover craft's forgotten values. Born into a family of craftsmen, he started working with wood at an early age and then trained at the School of Crafts in Germany and the Design Academy of Eindhoven in the Netherlands. He opened his workshop in 2012. His first object was a reproduction of a table made by The Shakers in the 18th century. With this piece, Frank made his intentions clear that his focus was on the making rather than on form. Since then, he has manifested his experimental spirit, working on projects that push boundaries and established conventions.


Interview

©Cristóbal Manuel
©Frank Buschmann
Did you learn from a master?
Although I grew up in a family of craftsmen, I do not remember having had a master craftsman as reference. As a student, I discovered that cabinetmaking is the consecutive transfer of planes, in which the final shape of the object pre-exists in the previous plane. The perfection of the object is each and the sum of all these planes. Each step then demands perfection in itself. Each step is the object.
Why did you choose this profession?
Like most of the decisions I have made in my life I followed my intuition. I started working with wood as a child and later I dedicated myself to design, performance art, cultural management and teaching, among other trades. I have always focused on all these activities with the attitude of an artisan, seeking perfection, observing, imitating and repeating.
How is your trade linked to the region where you live?
On the Costa da Morte in Galicia, where I live, artisanal boatbuilding has a long tradition and some of my works have been inspired by its constructive methods, but in general my work does not respond to the Galician specificities. This does not mean that the region does not have an influence on me. For example, the climatic conditions, the high degree of humidity or the available woods influence my work.
How do you express tradition and innovation in your work?
The potential for true innovation in crafts lies not in form or design but in introducing the artisan attitudes as universal tools into the toolbox with which we construct future. The best form of innovation that craftsmanship can bring comes from the values it offers in its practice: doing well for the sake of doing well, the search for integrity and perfection, patience and intuition, the care of resources and the process.
Frank Buschmann is a master artisan: he began his career in 1991 and he started teaching in 2014

Where


Frank Buschmann

Address: Lugar de Noutigos 7, 15293, Carnota, Spain
Hours: By appointment only
Phone: +34 606461086
Languages: Spanish, German, English, Dutch
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