Gill Benzion was going down the path of
becoming an electrical engineer, when he took a woodworking course
because he wanted to build electric guitars. "I fell in love
with furniture making, and never looked back," he said.
He also pursued further education in
woodworking, including as a winner of a 2011 Furniture Society
scholarship. Gill used his award to attend a two-week seminar on
steam bending with instructor Mitch Ryerson at the Haystack
Mountain
School of Crafts in Maine.
"It was something completely and
totally new, that would take me out of my comfort zone, and force me
to explore new ways of building," he said. Plus, Gill noted, "I
was able to learn so much, not only in terms of woodworking, but also
the new culture I was exposed to," where, instead of the busy
city life in which he grew up, the preference was for a simple life,
steeped in craft.
While at Haystack Mountain, Gill built
his first sit-down dining chair -- with a rather condensed timeframe.
"The second week I was there, I decided, maybe a little
foolishly, to build a chair in that one week." He built the
chair with the intention to donate it to the school's end-of-semester
auction to fund scholarships, "and I finished it moments before.
You could still smell the polyurethane on it as it was being carried
in to have it set up for the auction."
The chair remains his favorite piece.
"There are so many amazing memories associated with that chair,"
he said, including the people he met and who gave him assistance on
the project.
Back home in Montreal, Quebec, Gill
says he continues to learn something from almost every project. He
pursues a variety of them, because he says he gets bored very easily
and wants to "explore as
many options as I can" -- but he
also notes that "the heavy and repeated use of jigs" is a
strong characteristic of his work.
"I've learned time and time again:
if it's worth putting in the time and investment to make something,
it's worth making it repeatable. If it's worth building, it's worth
building twice."
He used one particular shaper jig for
the legs of some bar stools. The legs seem to have through tenons,
but in actuality, after using the jig to mortise the legs and the
rails at the same time, Gill was able to insert a tenon from outside,
to give the appearance of a through tenon. The jig is still in his
shop, "waiting for the day I revisit that project," Gill
said. "The best tool is one you make yourself, in my opinion.
Everything can be modified; if you have the knowledge and are brave
enough, by all means do it."
As for the best woods, in his opinion,
Gill said, "I like using local woods as much as possible. If I
know where it came from, I feel like I have more of a connection with
the wood." With easy access to
lumber mills in and around the
rural parts of Quebec, he noted, "There's so much lumber here in
my backyard, why would I go anywhere else?"
It's an interesting time to do studio
furniture work in Quebec, Gill says: the generation of European
immigrants with training in specific, traditional skill sets is
retiring, and the younger generation, while acknowledging that there
is much to learn from their elders, is adapting these techniques into
current interpretations, both technically and stylistically. "It's
a dynamic scene," Gill said. "It keeps you on your toes;
you can't be satisfied with 'good enough.'"
Gill undertakes a variety of projects
-- including refinishing guitars that he coats in comic books -- but
personally, for the moment, he finds himself focusing on smaller
woodworking projects. Without a
shop for a while, Gill focused on
making wooden jewelry, "which turned into a full-time job."
That's gratifying, he said, both for
him and for other woodworkers. "It's uplifting to see that
there's still a market for custom-made, or for handmade furniture."