Black Myrtlewood Burl Bowl
Black Myrtlewood Burl Bowl
Black Myrtlewood Burl bowl
Black Myrtlewood Burl bowl
Black Myrtlewood Burl Bowl
Black Myrtlewood Burl Bowl
Black Myrtlewood Burl bowl
Black Myrtlewood Burl Bowl
ONE OF A KIND

Black Myrtlewood Burl Bowl

Wood Vessel (ID: A178726)
Designed by John M. Russell
$150
$150 $150 /
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This small, turning bowl is made from Black Myrtlewood burl; Myrtlewood is a large hardwood tree that only grows in the coastal forests of California and southern Oregon coasts. Finished with multiple coats of lacquer.
  • One-of-a-kind piece
  • Signed by the artist
  • Materials: Wood
  • Shipping Charges are calculated for standard delivery to a single address within the contiguous USA and based on original prices, before discounts.
  • You may return or exchange any item within 14 days of receiving it (except for final sale items, ornament gift boxes, and custom orders). Learn More.

John M. Russell

"My goal is to create a form that demands to be held, to be explored, and to be viewed for its inherent beauty."

Russell uses woods that come from all over the world—unusual, highly figured, burled, and exotic. Rather than forcing each piece to take a certain shape, he allows the wood's natural grain to determine the pattern. He believes that his role is to help express the wood's personality in the vessel's final form.

Applying his knowledge of the technical aspects of photography to the process of wood turning, John Russell distills the vision and essence of one craft for use in another. Knowing how light surrounds and reflects off photographed subjects, Russell inlays many of his large vessels with minerals—opals, turquoise, and pewter—to capture those same reflections. The way the light reflects off of these inlays, as well as the shape and grain of the wood, allows the vessel to take on a personality of its own.

Russell received a BA in photography from the Brooks Institute of Photography in Santa Barbara, California. It was during his years as a commercial photographer that his artistic interest began to take on a physical form. His travels around the world also influenced how his artistic creativity would take shape. He has been a self-taught woodturner since 1989, creating work in his home studio in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley.

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