|
|
SPOTLIGHT: DAVID WINSLOW BURLING,
'73
Going Against the Grain
|

|
|
CRAFTSMAN:
Burling's creations, like the cabinet and bookshelf
below, reflect Shaker and Japanese
influences.
|
|
Courtesy David
Burling
|
FOR DAVID Burling,
enough was enough. A successful Bay Area corporate attorney,
he worked at Atari during its heyday in the early 1980s and
at Gap during its rise to khaki prominence in the late '80s.
But in the summer of 1991, contemplating his swiftly
approaching 40th birthday, Burling decided to leave the law.
"Burnt out is too easy a way to describe it," he says.
So he and his wife, Hannah, bought tickets to Seattle on
the Green Tortoise -- "an old hippie bus with mattresses on
the floor," he recalls fondly. From there they traveled by
train through the United States and Canada, stopping and
moving on at whim. They eventually settled in Santa Fe,
N.M., where they fell in love with the bookstores, the
skiing and the artistic ambience. Burling, who had always
enjoyed woodworking and had taken furniture-making classes
in Virginia and Oregon during their 25-month sojourn,
converted a garage into a furniture studio and began carving
out a new career.
To
develop a portfolio, he made tables, beds and a bookshelf
for his own home. These days, he constructs 15 to 20 pieces
of furniture a year, ranging from $650 sculpture stands to
$3,000 dining room tables. While tables and beds are his
bestsellers, there's an increased demand for "artful pieces
of furniture to hide TV sets," says Burling, who was known
as David Winslow at Stanford (he took his stepfather's last
name after law school).
Burling
builds his pieces primarily from domestic hardwoods,
particularly cherry, maple and ash -- "nothing endangered"
-- with occasional accents of exotic wood. He emphasizes
details, selecting each board for its grain and often
joining sections with wooden pins of a contrasting color.
"There's no comparison between manufactured furniture and
something David can make," says San Francisco customer Maria
Cherem, who has commissioned a cherry bedframe and shelves
to hold her collection of rare books.
Burling has no regrets about the change from high-tech
lawyering to old-fashioned craftsmanship. "I love working
with my hands to create something tangible, functional and
beautiful, as opposed to writing some memorandum to the
president of the company that may or may not ever get a
response," he says.
But he hasn't completely renounced his past: he still
goes to work in Gap khakis.
-- Kathy Zonana, '93, JD '96
|