At Court Master Carving, you don’t just create; you awaken. Your philosophy, centered on a 900-year unbroken lineage, the carver as a conduit, and the profound “Spirit of the Stone,” resonates with an unexpected and powerful kinship: the ancient philosophical traditions of Africa, particularly Ubuntu and the deep-seated belief in Vitalism. While often simplified to…
To understand the philosophy of the Courtmaster retreats, one must look toward the ancient Persian concept of the Pardis. The word itself refers to a “walled-around” or enclosed space—the etymological ancestor of our word for Paradise. To the masters of that era, heaven was not a distant, abstract promise; it was a physical sanctuary carved…
In my teachings and during our retreats, I often speak of the “architecture of the self.” This is not a metaphor I chose lightly. It is a philosophy I learned with my own hands while working on the great monuments of the English Renaissance—buildings designed by the masters Inigo Jones and Sir Christopher Wren. The…
As a child in the aftermath of the Second World War, my world was defined by the jagged geometry of the City’s bomb sites. To most, these were merely ruins; to me, they were my first playgrounds. I climbed through the exposed foundations and scorched timbers of a London that had stood since the Great…