Oliver Spendley | Sculptor
As we prepared to open doors to our new Burlington Arcade Boutique earlier this month, we sought out the skillset of local Scottish craftspeople to help make the ‘House’ a home. Amongst the talent was sculptor, Oliver Spendley. Based in the Highlands, Oliver spends his days perfecting his craft in creating Totem-style furniture and sculptures using natural, sustainably sourced materials. We chat more about the project he created for our new store and the inspiration behind it, whilst learning more about his venture.
Tell us more about the materials you use and how you source them.
 
Everything is from the Highlands, from the local beaches and remote places. I’m very much in touch with gathering materials. So, it's not just like going and buying from a shop, this sort of thing. The process starts with me gathering what it is I'm going to be using in the in the work. So, for instance, the Burlington Arcade table, that was a stone as found in an inlet.
But yeah, it's basically just being out in, in nature, and being absorbed in all of that gathering. Understanding what I'm going to be making - a sculpture or a piece of furniture and what I’ll need – and that’s how it begins. I’ll look to source local timber, too.
How did you make the transition into Sculpting?
 
The transition is hard to actually put my finger on. Sculpture wasn't always something I wanted to do. It wasn't like I'll at some point I'll do sculpture. I went from the boat building into wooden tables and that felt like an easy transition because it was furniture and it was something I wanted to have a business in.
In Scotland, that the whole sculptural element came in and I don't really know where from. It just felt appropriate and was a response to living here and the being immersed here, I think, and working with what I had to work with. So it was a bit of a necessity. I don't know. It's actually a hard thing to answer. It's very much inspired and sort of incorporating where I'm living. It’s very mountainous here. It's very wild here. And I think that's made its way into the work in the form of stone, but also the sculptural and sort of physical elements of it, too.
Tell us about the table.
 
The bespoke table is made solely from Scottish Highland materials. Scottish Burl Elm to create the base of the sculptural leg along with Lewisian Gneiss stone from the North Coast forms a totemic sculpture, a fusion of raw, robust and refined elements.Burl Elm tree creates the leg and a live edge Elm (Burl Ash) top for the surface of the table. The natural edge has been charred black to create a striking contrast between the outline of the tree's original shape and the highly finished surface of the beautiful grain of the timber tabletop.The process takes about a month. Searching for the rock in the wilderness waterways and sourcing timber from small local sawmills is how it starts. Watching the piece come together is deeply rewarding. Carefully scribing the stone to emerge though the surface of the table is a long and delicate process. Heavy and hand crafted from start to finish. Other features include hand carved growth rings and figured elm butterfly joints. The piece embodies the Scottish wilderness in all its beauty.