Not on display

Box

1978 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

David Pye was a trained architect, furniture-maker and teacher, a theorist and accomplished wood-turner and carver. He taught furniture design at the Royal College of Art first as a tutor from 1948 and then as a Professor from 1963 until his retirement in 1974. His unsentimental writings on the nature of design and workmanship influenced a generation of designers and craft writers. Pye also made some of his own tools and by 1950 he had invented the ‘fluting engine’. This was used to create the smooth rhythmic flutes seen on the inner surface of some of his bowls. A smaller version of this tool was in use by the 1970s for engraving similar patterns on the lids of miniature boxes.

Pye produced turned objects for most of his working life, but it was only when he retired that he began to do this in earnest. Simple, elegant yet exquisitely worked, each of his pieces is unique. Pye was interested in the effects of light, shadow and reflection in helping to define the shape of an object. By using glossy and sometimes tropical woods and creating textured surfaces he made seemingly simple objects come alive with detail. The combination of twisted fluting on the box and radial fluting on the top of the lid make this piece especially lively.

Object details

Category
Object type
Parts
This object consists of 2 parts.

  • Lid
  • Box
Materials and techniques
Turned rosewood with moulded lid
Brief description
Turned cylindrical rosewood box with moulded lid; English 1978 des. and man. David Pye
Physical description
Small cylindrical box with lid, made of turned rosewood. The lid is very slightly convex, with moulded fluting in a radiating design from a central raised dimple. The edges of the lid are left smoothly moulded in two sections with a very slight lip around the bottom edge. The box is turned round, without a lip or foot. It has been finished with regularly spaced fluting around the outside edge which is at a diagonal angle to the straight grain of the wood.
Dimensions
  • Height: 5cm
  • Diameter: 5cm
dimensions approx, object cased LC 18/10/10
Gallery label
THREE BOXES WITH LIDS
Designed and made by David Pye (British, born 1914), Great Britain, 1978
Turned woods
Given by the maker
W.131,132,133-1978

Pye was the first to express the notion of 'the workmanship of risk' in contrast to the 'workmanship of uncertainty', comparing the effects of unpredictable material or the slip of the hand with industry's uniform production line. The intricate precision of these handmade boxes is typical of his work.

[20th century gallery]
Credit line
Given by the maker
Summary
David Pye was a trained architect, furniture-maker and teacher, a theorist and accomplished wood-turner and carver. He taught furniture design at the Royal College of Art first as a tutor from 1948 and then as a Professor from 1963 until his retirement in 1974. His unsentimental writings on the nature of design and workmanship influenced a generation of designers and craft writers. Pye also made some of his own tools and by 1950 he had invented the ‘fluting engine’. This was used to create the smooth rhythmic flutes seen on the inner surface of some of his bowls. A smaller version of this tool was in use by the 1970s for engraving similar patterns on the lids of miniature boxes.

Pye produced turned objects for most of his working life, but it was only when he retired that he began to do this in earnest. Simple, elegant yet exquisitely worked, each of his pieces is unique. Pye was interested in the effects of light, shadow and reflection in helping to define the shape of an object. By using glossy and sometimes tropical woods and creating textured surfaces he made seemingly simple objects come alive with detail. The combination of twisted fluting on the box and radial fluting on the top of the lid make this piece especially lively.
Collection
Accession number
W.132&A-1978

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Record createdFebruary 8, 2008
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