Brienz Carving School Tour

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Entrance of Brienz Carving School building with group of visitors on steps

To be a woodcarver in Switzerland requires 4 years of formal schooling from the Brienz Carving School. Potential students must pass an aptitude test prior to being accepted. The students in Brienz are trained to be exact and accurate artisans and also trained to be fast for production purposes. Upon graduation, a student must be able to do specialty commissioned carvings of any scale and also mass produce to be able to make a living at their craft.

Three disciplines based on the traditional carving of Brienz are offered: ornamentation, animal figures and human figures. Students choose one of these three main areas of study.

Our first stop was a classroom where the students had been previously taken to The Ballenberg Open Air Museum to visit the many goats and select a favorite goat as a model. There are six students in the class. The students learn by first creating design drawings of their animal and then shape their first model in plasticine or modeling clay (see pic below). The final procedure is to carve the animal in wood where correct anatomy is a must. This is an exercise in anatomy by learning to observe, imagine, draw, mold and create.

Students carving wood sculptures on carving stands in a workshop with an instructor observing.
Clay model of a reclining antelope with detailed musculature on a woodworking bench
Woodworker holding a carved wooden chair seat and a box of carving tools in workshop
Woodworkers assembling a carved wooden box frame with design sketches in a workshop setting
Woodcarver showing a large carved wood bear head to visitors in a workshop with puzzle-piece wood wall art.
Woodcarver refining details on a standing human figure sculpture in a workshop setting

Next we moved into the room filled with approximately 10 work benches and wooden lockers where more advanced students were carving in wood. Some students are working on ornamental pieces, such as the twisted piece carved from one solid piece of wood. One student is working on a table he built and now must carve a relief motif of ivy leaves on each side. He draws the leaves, carves the leaves on a separate piece of wood first and will eventually carve on the table itself.

Some of the students were working on commissioned pieces including the huge bear head located on the first bench. The bear will be placed under the roof gable of a traditional home:

In one instance, a young female carver had been commissioned to carve a statue of a retiring college professor. Rather than the American tradition of having an oil painting made of the retiree, in Brienz, a wooden statue is created. The facial features must be vivid, exact and recognizable. The statue should reflect an attribute of the professor’s area of study:

Commissioned works give students an opportunity to earn money while getting through school. Each student is responsible for the cost and care of all their tools. Students will graduate with over one hundred Pfeil “Swiss Made” carving tools. The students will customize their identity into their tools by carving their initials in the handles or painting or staining the solid ash handles various colors. Students also make their own wooden caliper tools for measurement:

Wood carving chisels with green and yellow handles organized on a wooden rack in workshop.
Man demonstrating a wooden caliper tool for measuring in a wood carving workshop with a woman observing.
Woodworkers carving a large ice block outdoors, then posing with finished ice sculpture in public square

Students are encouraged to enter carving contests, which also include carving ice. These students took third place in Berlin for their ice carving of the two bears. Many of the contests require crystal clear ice which is typically imported from Switzerland.

As we leave this room, a giant puzzle on the wall is explainedto us. Each graduating class carves a piece of the puzzle placing their names and graduation year on the hand carved piece.

We are taken to the sharpening area. There are two large water stones, three bench grinders and a Tormek water cooled sharpening system and a table of sharpening stones. Students may choose their preferred system, however, students are responsible for sharpening their own tools from the first day of class.

Wooden puzzle pieces with carved numbers and painted shapes displayed on workshop wall above doorway
Man adjusting a green wood lathe in a woodworking workshop with wooden cabinets and chalkboard behind
Bench grinder and sharpening wheels mounted on a workshop bench with dust and wood shavings.
Workbench with carving tools, wooden blocks, and cloth near a window in workshop
Large clear plastic bags filled with wood shavings stacked outside a wooden building wall.

Also in this room we visited with students who are carving from drawings, taxidermy, and models. There are also several wooden blanks of an identical Egyptian cat displayed. The instructor will finish one cat to completion and the students will have to create exact replicas by hand. These pieces have been commissioned for a museum exhibit.

Our next stop is the machine shop where the school produces the wooden blanks, such as the cats and relief carvings for production. There are several industrial grade stationary tools including a milling machine, band saw, planer, drill press and disk sander.

In Switzerland everything is recycled and nothing is wasted. As we leave the building there are large bags of sawdust. The main sources of heat are wood and oil. The sawdust and chips are used for heating.

Wood carving workbench with rough wood relief, carving tools, and a detailed sketch pattern
Row of partially carved wooden cat figures on blocks with carving tools on workbench in workshop
Row of unfinished wooden bird carvings on a workbench with bird taxidermy models for reference
Woodworking workshop with green stationary machines, workbenches, and dust collection hoses
Workshop interior with vintage green woodworking machines and people observing wood carving tools and materials
Green horizontal wood shaper machine with wood shavings on table and person standing behind it in workshop

Students are also taught how to make plaster molds and cast images in bronze. The students carve the sculpture (typically this done in wax) and the wax sculpture is encased in plaster. Once the plaster dries, the wax is melted away leaving the plaster mold in which to pour the molten bronze. This is often referred to as Lost-wax casting or as sometimes called by the French cire perdue (from the Latin cera perduta). After the bronze cools the plaster is removed to reveal the sculpture in bronze.

We visit the model rooms where there are original models dating back to the 16thcentury made from wood, plaster, bronze, and various other materials. Students may choose from these to replicate; thousands of them from Ibex skeletons to whimsical leprechauns to Greek Corinthian and Ionic columns.

As we leave the school, we notice the outside of the building is plain in comparison to the residential chalets except for the many sculptures placed around the landscaping and entry way. Behind the building, we find dinosaur sculptures, which were commissioned by a theme park and the carving begins with a chain saw. Behind the woodcarving school is the Geigenbauschule Brienz (or Brienz Swiss School of Violin Making).

Hands examining plaster molds used for wood carving patterns on a workshop table
Shelves holding plaster molds and rough carving forms in a woodcarving workshop room
Detailed wood carving of a rhinoceros with textured skin on a display pedestal
Shelves filled with plaster animal carving models including horses, bears, and a camel in a woodcarving workshop.
Wooden anatomical and portrait busts displayed on workshop shelves for carving reference.
Wooden workshop attic with carved animal forms and skeletal models for carving reference
Intricately carved wooden sculpture of a seated woman with a wolf beside her in workshop setting
Man observing large rough wood carvings of animals displayed outdoors on stacked pallets at a carving school workshop.
Large rough wood carving of a dinosaur in progress outdoors with carving tools and a small dinosaur model nearby
Sign on log wall reading Geigenbauschule Brienz Swiss School of Violin Making at woodworking school building

Before our tour was over, Felix Zulauf, owner of Pfeil Tools got a chance to look at our winner, Nairi’s book of carvings:

Wood-carved sculptures of a seated man and standing dog on a balcony with alpine chalet background
Woodworking illustration from article Brienz Carving School Tour
Wood-carved frieze with human figures above wooden pews in a workshop or chapel setting
Pipe organ with carved wooden panels and floral motifs in a chapel interior
Solid wood church pew with mortise and tenon joinery on tiled floor
Traditional Swiss wooden chalet exterior with carved balcony railings and flowering rose bushes
Exterior of Brienz Carving School with wood sculptures displayed on the lawn
Two men talking outside a stone building overlooking a village and forested mountains, no visible woodworking tools or
Traditional Swiss chalet with detailed wooden balcony railings and carved supports in Brienz village
Traditional Swiss chalet exterior with wooden balconies and flower boxes in Brienz village
Lake and mountain landscape viewed from a stone terrace outside a building, no woodworking visible
Scenic view of Brienz village with traditional wooden houses and surrounding mountains
Scenic view of lakeside village with mountains, trees, and rooftops near Brienz carving school area
Two people standing by a stone railing overlooking a mountain lake under a cloudy sky
Village with traditional wooden rooftops along a lake, surrounded by mountains and trees
Woodworking illustration from article Brienz Carving School Tour
Traditional wooden chalet buildings in Brienz village, surrounded by forested hills and mountains.

Next up on the agenda is our blog on The Woodcarver’s Tools by Christoph Wunderle followed by the history and facility tour of Pfeil…Stay Tuned!

auf Wiedersehen…Frank!

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