Summer Beam Books
Virtuoso: The Tool Cabinet and Workbench of Henry O. Studley by Donald C. Williams
Virtuoso: The Tool Cabinet and Workbench of Henry O. Studley by Donald C. Williams
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Virtuoso: The Tool Cabinet and Workbench of Henry O. Studley, Narayan Nayar (Photographer)
Lost Art Press
Produced and printed in the U.S. The interior paper is an #80 coated matte paper.
216 pages, 2.41 lbs
In the space of just 10” x 39” x 19-1/2”, H.O. Studley managed to arrange – with perfection – more than 250 of his tools into a dovetailed mahogany cabinet that has captivated tens of thousands of woodworkers since it was first unveiled in 1988 on the back cover of Fine Woodworking with a single shocking photograph.
After a brief stay at the Smithsonian, the cabinet was sold to a private collector and hasn’t been seen by the public for well over a decade. Studley’s workbench has never been on public view.
Donald Williams and a team of supporting characters spent four years researching, documenting and photographing both the cabinet and Studley’s equally amazing workbench to create Virtuoso: The Tool Cabinet and Workbench of Henry O. Studley.
This book is the first in-depth examination of one of the most beautiful woodworking tool chests ever constructed and presents the first-ever biography of Studley (1838-1925), a piano and organ builder in Quincy, Massachusetts. In this book, Williams uses original research to answer the questions that flash through the minds of everyone who views the cabinet:
How did he build it?
How does it work?
And why would anyone construct such a monument to his tools?
In this book, you will find measurements, details and photographs of all the tools in the cabinet. Every swinging frame, hinged panel and nook of this three-dimensional, multi-layered sculpture has been analyzed so you can understand how it folds in on itself like a giant piece of mahogany origami.
You will meet the man himself, H.O. Studley, and get a glimpse into the trade of high-end organ and piano makers in 19th- and 20th-century New England.
But most of all, you will see the cabinet in a way that only a handful of privileged people ever have. And you will realize that the magazine photograph that electrified the woodworking world in 1988 only scratches the surface of the cabinet’s complete magnificence.
Don Williams is a conservator, educator, scholar and all-around inquisitive guy, having worked on some of the most interesting objects and historic buildings in our nation’s public and private collections. He has developed, managed and presented educational programming on an array of subjects in the fields of conservation, woodworking and wood finishing, and has published and presented scholarly research on subjects like ancient coating materials and craft techniques, and created pioneering uses for traditional and modern materials, including some of his own invention.
