Before moving here, where was your workshop?
Pierluigi Ghianda: We were located in the centre of Bovisio Masciago. At the time, there were three or four families, then a courtyard with the workshop below. At the time, we did things fast, on the way home from school, first you went to the workshop and then home.
The first object I made was a sword, I think: in those days, Zorro was our idol! My passion for this work grew with time: I’ve always liked being an engraver.
We moved here at the end of the 1960s. This workshop is four times larger than the previous one, but when I moved everything here, I realized that I would never manage to get everything inside! For that matter, when you know you don’t have a lot of space, you have to use your imagination.
How many people work here, and what kind of work do they do?
About 8 people work here. A craftsman must know how to do everything, not just a table or a chair; he must love the material. With wood, you can do whatever you want: from chairs to tables, from eating utensils to spheres to spectacles - anything.
How many types of wood do you know or have you worked with?
Hundreds, maybe: I have always been a stickler about going to look for wood in foreign countries. An inexhaustible source of material and inspiration is the Amazon forest: trees of many colours grow there. But there are also extremely beautiful trees in Europe and Japan. I could go on and on talking about wood forever!
Where do you get your inspiration?
Inspiration comes from any situation and develops with anybody. Let’s say that with some people, you get on immediately and things happen more rapidly.
We have the bad habit of not throwing anything away: a scrap that doesn’t mean anything today – you set it down over there, then somebody else comes along, photographs it and I get an idea, seeing the photograph: this is really what inspiration is.
Do you think that the evolution of technology has changed your work?
For production in series, it’s really important! Let me tell you this anecdote: one day an engineer came along; while we were going around the workshop, he said: “With the machines we build today, your objects could be carved in five minutes”. I answered that when they make machines with fingertips that feel like our fingers and eyes that see like ours, I would order ten of them. But until that time comes along, don’t come and tell me that machines work better than humans!