David Belser

wood artist
Boxes

Stage of Enchantment

Stage of Enchantment

Material: Bamboo, Ash, Glass
Size: 5 1/2” high, 5 1/2” wide and 4” deep
Completed: February 2010
Price: na
Owner: private collection

A collaboration with Harry and Wendy Besett of Vermont Glass Workshop (http://vtglass.com).

I met Wendy & Harry at the annual League of NH Craftsmen fair on Mount Sunapee. Last August, I asked if they were interested in doing a collaboration.

The collaboration  was more challenging than I expected. The original idea was to simply use one of my bamboo spherical boxes as container for one of their glass spheres. The biggest challenge was creating a stand that would support the substantial weight of the glass but still allow for the light and shadow effects caused by the pierced bamboo sphere.

One of the ideas was a gimbal that would allow the sphere to be tilted, at the same time I was thinking of Victorian era iron work girders and beams – this stand is the result. To create the “beam work” effect I sandwiched bamboo sticks between two layers of ash veneer (sparsely) this allows you to look right through the beams when viewed looking straight at the ends of the sticks.

The glass sphere is one of Wendy’s “Stillness Spheres” it has the 3 silhouettes embedded on one side and a single silhouette opposing on the other. When you view it the glass acts as a magnifier enlarging the silhouette on the farther side – this creates a 3 against 1 larger/smaller effect that is quite provocative. It can be seen as one big person embracing three small ones or as three big people intimidating one small one.

It was tough to balance the regular formal appearance of the bamboo with the human natural feel of the glass. I think that led me to think of the elegant engineering of the industrial age.

Phyllostachys Hexagonos

hex_box 1 055Phyllostachys Hexagonos (bamboo hexagons)

Material: Bamboo, Cherry, Epoxy
Size: 3" dia. 14" tall
Completed: October 2009
Price: n/a
Owner: Collection of Dr. Michael Goldberg

Winner of 1st Place at The 30th Annual Box and Container Show, Northwest Fine Woodworking

This striking pierced bamboo box is constructed from approximately 1000 individual sticks. The sticks are packed loosely  in a hexagonal or honeycomb pattern,  turned to a sphere and then hollowed. The result is a delicate open mesh box that brings to mind a mosque dome or Victorian tile pattern.

While some would consider this a form segmented turning, I arrived here from a different direction. I’ve been experimenting with constructing my “raw” materials with negative space or voids built in. These blanks are then turned into a final form.

Cryptex Tantalus

Tantalus_PatienceMaterial: Walnut, Maple, Cherry
Size: 6" Diameter, 15" Tall
Completed: 1/8/2007
Price: Available upon request.
Owner: Available for purchase

To the left is the first production Tantalus.  Over the course of two years (spring of 2006  – fall of 2007), I produced and sold thirty five copies of this model.

This device combines a Tantalus – a 19th century device that allowed one to keep the liquor safe from the servants and a Cryptex – a fictional 15th century device that allowed one to keep secrets for centuries, from the best selling book “The Da Vinci Code”.

After reading the description in the book, I set out to build one in wood.

The Cryptex Tantalus has 8 rings consisting of 16 segments each. These rings rotate around a central cylinder that is large enough to contain most 750ml wine or liquor bottles.

When the rings are properly aligned, spelling the codeword, the cylinder can be separated into two parts allowing access to the bottle.

cryptex-productionThe symbols on the rings can be anything, the most practical being letters, that when arranged vertically spell the secret word unlocking the secret of the Cryptex Tantalus.

I make each Tantalus by hand in my workshop, customizing the font and code for the client – no two are exactly alike. They are produced in small runs of 10 or less and each is signed, numbered and dated. Your satisfaction of quality and detail is guaranteed. I stand behind my work. Much like a fine musical instrument, the Tantalus is carefully constructed and finished with a durable lacquer finish. As with most finely made wood craft, the Tantalus can be repaired unless significantly damaged,  if properly cared for it should survive for centuries!

The images on this page are of the first model Tantalus which is no longer in production. However, in the near future I will begin a production of the next model. If you are interested in owning a Tantalus in the future, please contact me. I will put you on the waiting list and let you know when production resumes.

I also accept commissions for one of a kind Tantalus made from specific wood species with custom details, limited only by your imagination and my skills.

Nest

NestMaterial: Sticks, Cherry, Roadside branch, Black & White Ebony
Size: 4" Tall, 3" Diameter
Completed: March 2009
Price: $265
Owner: Available for purchase

Nest is the beginning of a new exploration of ideas. It consists of twigs collected in the New Hampshire woods, gathered into a small bundle which is mounted in a cherry base. A steep parabolic hollow is then turned in the sticks, creating a “nest” that holds the egg.

The egg is actually a box, turned from a branch collected from the side of the road. It was turned around Easter time, inspired by the plastic eggs in which one hides candy.

Every box must have a surprise inside. This egg contains a small, fully functional top of my own design, which can be worn as a pendant. The top hangs from a clip and allows for hours of spinning pleasure.

I like the fact that this piece is three separate works, made over the course of three years.

Safe Box “The Illusion of Security”

Safe Box #1 (closed)

Safe Box “The Illusion of Security”

Material: Mahogany, Cherry, Ebony and Maple
Size: 3 1/4" Diameter, 3 1/2" Height
Completed: Spring 2007
Price: $650
Owner: Copies available on commission.

The idea for this box developed over time. I had completed several of my Cryptex Tantalus boxes and was considering what to make next. After attending several design rotations at the national woodturning symposium, I was thinking about how to make a locking box where all of the design elements held together. The idea of a vault or safe like structure, particularly a radial arrangement of locking bolts was in my mind.

Safe Box #1 (lid detail)

During this process, I found myself standing in the teller line at my local bank looking at the 150 year old walk-in vault. I’ve admired this vault and all of it’s mechanical workings in the past, but this time I had more time and more interest. The vault has two doors and they are both swung wide open during business hours. In this presentation, the vault designer chose to display a highly complex arrangement of gears, racks and large steel bars that hold the vault shut. All driven off of one gear in the center that connects to a handle on the front of the door. Walnut sized nuts out of bronze appear to hold the mechanism in place. Every single piece of metal is engraved with a fine detail. I started asking myself what was the designer thinking, does the complexity make it more secure?  Why would you put so much effort into embellishing the mechanism? Would it not have been cheaper and stronger to just weld or rivet it together?

And finally, why would one choose to expose so much of, let alone any details of the workings of a vault? This vault is open 8 hours a day and anyone can spend a good deal of  time looking at and contemplating the mechanism as I was now. Is it a trick or a tease to any potential bank robber? And then it hit me, the inside of this vault was made to be looked at, to be on display for the bank. It’s intent is to make you (or me) the customer feel safe and secure about keeping money in this bank. The majority of bank thefts attack the human side of security, an inside job, or done when the bank (and the vault) is open on payday.

The purpose of this vault is to make me feel secure, it is an illusion of security.

Safe Box #2 (open)

This concept resonated strongly with me, airport “security”, a job with steady income and health insurance, marriage, religious faith, a big house with a mortgage – all the various ways we surround ourselves with the illusion of security.

I no longer concerned myself with the actual security of my locking box, It can be smashed or sawed open in an instant, it too is an illusion.

The sides are detailed with a fine outline derived from an Arabic mosaic pattern, the lines broken to give the appearance of a woven mesh. The dial is from a memory I have of a post office box that my parents used when I was young and we lived in a small town. The face had two knobs and raised lines in the cast metal door.

Safe Box #2 (closed)

This box has a combination that must be demonstrated each time it is shown. You explain that it functions like a combination lock left-right-left, while turning the dial back and forth to the numbers of the combination, slowly so that the clicking sound feeds the illusion. When the combination is completed, lift the lid and show the underside, hand it to the person you are showing it to and let them turn the knob while looking at the top. Usually by this point I’m being asked questions about how the mechanism works or even “Where did you buy the mechanism?”.  I explain that it uses a set of eccentric cams or gears and that while not trivial, it is not as complicated as it appears. Turn the knob back to the final number close the box and spin the knob to lock it.

While some people choose not to consider the workings and just accept that it is a combination lock made from wood, others who spend time with it soon realize that it is simply a single position latch. It is still a rather clever mechanism to accomplish this. I prefer to let people figure it out, for me this makes the box a performance piece, somewhat like a magic trick. What I get out of it is how others react.

The first time I demonstrated this to another professional woodturner, I was practically shaking. Terrified that I would be called out on the spot for my intentional deception. I am not a good liar. I very quickly explained that it was a deception and showed how the box worked. To my surprise he was amazed by the box. He encouraged me NOT to explain it’s workings when demonstrating it. Later that evening I demonstrated it many times to the attendees at a wood turning meeting. My progression from a guilty deceiver to a master illusionist culminated with demonstrating the “Safe Box” to a room of a hundred people or more, working it in front of a camera that projected for all to see.

I hope you enjoy “Safe Box”

Six Box Tops

A gift to a special friend

SixBoxTops1-dancing_lady

Spinning in the Rain

Rain_barrel1Material: Wenge, Maple, Lilac, Smoke bush, Ash, Ebony
Size: 2" diameter, 3 1/2" tall
Completed: Spring 2006
Price: N/A
Owner: Private Collection

Another take on six box tops: