Rue Ann Flanders says she knows it's
strange, but, "I really enjoy sanding wood."
That's one reason she feels like she
found her niche in wood sculpture after she took a class on the
subject at the Marc Adams School of Woodworking. "I find grinding
and sanding wood to be very therapeutic. It's a little loud and a lot
of dust, but you wear a dust mask and go on."
Rue Ann's wood sculpture recently
earned her inclusion in the book Wood Art Today 2 from
Schiffer Publishing (ISBN
978-0764334634),
a coffee table book focusing on contemporary wood artists.
One
example of her work in this line is her Blue Sculpture, which grew
from a 2x4 challenge: "We had to make something using one
construction grade 2 x 4 stud and one other element. I used the balls
as my second element," Rue Ann said. She likes that particular
sculpture in part because of its shape, the "angularity, with wings
on the sides."
Shape
is an area where she finds inspiration for her work, and fun. Rue Ann
says she is constantly looking at shapes in glasswork, or jewelry,
and she originally took the sculpture class in order to learn how to
use dimensional aspects to the whimsical furniture she was building.
She had already learned intarsia and knew that "I like curves
better than I do straight lines and angular lines."
For
example, her Steer Cabinet tabletop furniture incorporates curved
doors, with arches, and balls embedded into both the doors and the
legs of the piece. "My doors are always curved," Rue Ann said,
and the piece itself is "very much fun, but also functional. It has
piano-shaped drawers, that you can pull out and put jewelry or
whatever in."
Furniture,
in a way, reflects Rue Ann's original experiences with woodworking.
When she was around nine or 10 years old, "my dad brought home a
playhouse, but there was no furniture for it, so I would go down in
the basement and grab tools and make furniture to go with it."
Since her dad was a television engineer who owned a drill and hand
tools – no other power tools – for around-the-house use, that's
what the young Rue Ann used to construct her playhouse furniture from
construction wood scraps. "I made a big coffee table, which was the
only piece that didn't fall apart," she said. "I tried to make an
end table, and make a living room setting in there, but everything
else didn't make it from the basement to the playhouse."
After
that experience, it was a couple of decades later when her
then-fiance decided Rue Ann should get into woodworking and bought
her an inexpensive scroll saw. It sat in the basement for three years
before she picked it up to make centerpieces for a friend's wedding –
and came to the conclusion that it was a horrible saw. She bought a
better scroll, a drill and a sander, and fiddled around making
"crafty things that I thought were silly, but I did them anyway"
before she began making her furniture – in part because, "I would
look at furniture and think, 'I can make that.'"
These
days, one of Rue Ann's most used tools is an air-filled round
pneumatic drum sander, the kind used in making boat parts and
boomerangs. "I use that all the time," Rue Ann said, but, even
though she has built such things as a 7-foot tall armoire, she's
never used a table saw. "They scare me half to death," she said.
"I see too many people in the [Rockler Woodworking and Hardware
Indianapolis, where she is assistant manager] store walking in
without a finger."
She
does own a table saw, but has yet to resolve its wiring issues and
turn it on. She does note that, "It makes a good table. I set
things on it all the time."
The
wood that Rue Ann is not cutting on the table saw might be maple, for
bases and cabinets, but she is more likely to work with poplar. As a
softer wood, "it's easier to shape and sculpt," she said and,
"because I do all kinds of finishes – painting, metal leafing –
poplar works well. I can make poplar look like any other wood I
want."
Rue
Ann does not use exotic woods because she prefers to finish with
color. "I love color," she says, which is reflected in, for
example, her Steer Cabinet.
"Kids
are really attracted to it," Rue Ann said, "because it has so
many colors: fuschia, lime green, orange..."
While
she does use natural wood as well, Rue Ann feels that she needs to
marry the colored portions of her pieces with the natural wood. "The
way I do that is by coloring the grain," she said.
Speaking
of "finish" in its sense of completion, Rue Ann said that she had
a hard time picking a favorite among her works. "If it gets
finished, I like it," she said. "It's not ego; I just like what I
do."