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Bob Lyons class at the CMW Turning Learning Center 3/22

About this event



Please join us on Sunday, March 22, 2026

for a class with guest instructor


Bob Lyons

at

CMW's Turning Learning Center in Arden, NC


Active CMW membership and advance registration required
A fee is charged for the class


About the Class

Understanding Form:

The Bowl

 

The bowl is open and wide-mouthed compared to jars and cylindrical forms. It holds its space lightly, because its interior is really part of the surrounding space that is connected and flows into it. According to Greek myth, the first bowl was shaped over the breast of Aphrodite. The bowl form is a simple shape, basically a hollow hemisphere or variations of such, and can be expressed with many subtle variations and nuances. Turning a bowl may seem easy compared to many other forms, but bringing together the lip, the profile, the interior volume, and the foot, will be very elusive, a challenging problem, whose answers may take a lifetime of turning. But here lies the challenge, one that is loaded with possibilities and opportunity for creative exploration.

 

This class will focus on several different bowl forms. The S-curve, the Modified S, The Straight and Curved, the Parabola and bowl forms influenced by the catenary arch. There will be at least one PowerPoint presentation illustrating these various forms and other interesting aspects of our craft, and each participant will receive a PDF that discusses bowls and other important turning information. Each person will spend the class experimenting at the lathe on each suggested form, or a personal selection of forms. The class will conclude with a discussion of our successes and how we might improve our next attempts. Final sanding and finishing will take place back in your shops. The emphasis will be on understanding the form you’re trying to make, and practicing the techniques necessary to bring together the various parts of the bowl.

 

Key Points

 

*Lathe Safety

*Using the side ground bowl gouge along with other edge tools

*Shape Terminology

*Learn to think creatively

*Learn in a stress-free environment

 

Two kiln dried blanks will be provided, but each person is encouraged to bring several blanks either wet or dry, if you feel you might run out of material during the class.




About the Artist


Biography

Robert Lyon is a Distinguished Professor Emeritus from the University of South Carolina. For 38 years he taught ceramics, glassblowing, and sculpture at LSU and USC. Since his retirement in 2015, he has been a full-time studio artist.

 

He has been the recipient of many awards and grants, which include a National Endowment for the Arts Visual Artists Fellowship in sculpture, and a Southeastern Artists Fellowship from the Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art. Lyon has been an artist-in-residence at Artpark, The Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, Banff, Canada, Arts/Industry Residency Program - John Michael Kohler Arts Center, and was a resident fellow with the 2009 Windgate International Turning Exchange (ITE). He has been an invited participant at the Emma International Collaboration in Saskatoon, Canada, and the Echo Lake Collaboration, Newtown, Pennsylvania. In 2014 Robert was awarded an Individual Artist Fellowship in Craft from the South Carolina Arts Commission. He has taught woodturing at various schools including the Marc Adams School of Woodworking, John C. Campbell Folk School, Peters Valley School of Craft and Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts. Additionally, he has demonstrated woodturning at many venues including the AAW National Symposium, Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts, Swiss Association of Woodturning, Geneva, Switzerland, Yeoju (YIT) Institute of Technology, South Korea, and many AAW clubs in the USA.

 

He is represented by Momentum Gallery in Asheville, North Carolina, and resides in Columbia, South Carolina. You can find him on the web at: www.robertflyon.com

 

Artist Statement

My interest in cylindrical forms began early as a ceramics and glass student in art school. Over time, architecture, especially the forms of Italian architect Aldo Rossi, small granaries from the Ivory Coast, and the ancient towers of Iraq, were main influences on my sculptural forms. Thinking about making finials for some of my clay and wood pieces, eventually led me to the lathe.

 

My early turned work using pencils originates from an interest in memory. My mother had died, and she had suffered significant memory loss during her illness. Her dementia made me confront the fragility of our brain and how easily decades of recollections and thoughts can be erased. Working in my sketchbook, and experimenting at the lathe, I began to realize that graphite and erasers would make good visual metaphors for the way our brain works. A mark made with graphite is like our memory, easily smeared or erased, never permanent.

 

Some of my pieces have played off my observations as a beekeeper, as the pencils in cross-section have been grouped together so they take on a honeycomb pattern. In the others, I have experimented with encasing, sawing, and splitting pencils, and their erasers. In these works, the pencils echo patterns such as the vertical structure of the vessels and the cellular structure of the wood, along with abstracted patterns of the interiors of the pencils themselves.

 

My interest in combining pencils, erasers, sanding disks, cork, Tampico Fiber, and other objects into my turned vessels/objects continues to hold my interest. With these objects and images, I strive to make my work challenging, intriguing, compelling, inspiring, and beautiful.






Date and Time

Sunday, March 22, 2026, 9:00 AM until 4:00 PM

Location

CMW Turning Learning Center
739 Glenn Bridge Road
Arden, NC  28704
USA

Event Contact(s)

Laurie Bingaman Lackey

Tony Micocci

Category

TLC Member Class

Registration Info

Registration is required
Payment In Full In Advance Only
Registration cancellations will be accepted until Wednesday, March 18, 2026 at 12:00 PM
Cancellation Policy:
In the event you cancel your registration before the cutoff, 100% of your payment will be credited to your member account. This credit may be used for any future club purpose. Cancellation after the cutoff will not be credited unless a member moves off the waitlist. No credit will provided for a “no-show”.

Capacity

10 Total Slots
4 Available Slot(s)