Malcolm
MacLachlan
Wood
Sculptor
Background
Information
Malcolm MacLachlan trained as a tree surgeon and
horticulturalist in the late 1970's. He worked through a succession
of jobs spending 11 years as Head Gardener and then Arboretum Manager at
Batsford Arboretum in North Gloucestershire. Finally he spent some time as the
Curator of Trebah Gardens in Cornwall.
Frustrated with working in environments where he found it
difficult to unleash his creativity he moved with his family to East Yorkshire
with a view to starting his own business, although at that time he thought that
it would be as a freelance horticulturist or garden designer. Influenced
by roadside chainsaw carvers and events such as Sculptree at Westonbirt
Arboretum in Gloucestershire, he brought several tons of logwood and started
exploring the possibilities within the timber. Starting with a 2 ton
piece of sycamore his first piece was a garden seat standing about 2m tall and
representing unfurling crosiers of a giant Tree Fern.

This was influenced by the beautiful form of these ferns
native to Australia but now found in most of the Cornish Gardens.
This caused such a sensation as to be mentioned in local newspapers and provided
a steady stream of clients looking for something unique.
Malcolm's designs usually utilise native timbers and he prefers English Oak
to all others, except perhaps Yew. "Oak is wonderful to work" he says
"Quirky, but full of character and so durable." His
designs are garnered from nature and the organic form, nature abhors a straight
line and he tries to assimilate curves into most of his work.
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