“Masque Elephant”
For his Wood Animals series, French artist Marc Sparfel transforms discarded furniture into beautiful sculptures of animals.
Category: chair art
Amazing Shadow Chairs by Kumi Yamashita
Amazing Shadow Chairs
By Kumi Yamashita, a Japan born artist working in the USA.
KUMI YAMASHITA – Chair
2010
H110, W50, D15cm
Carved wood, single light source, shadow
Private collection
Via apevol:
Engineering Temporality by Tuomas Markunpoika Tolvanen
Engineering Temporality, a mini collection of a cabinet and a chair, by Design Academy Eindhoven graduate Tuomas Markunpoika Tolvanen is a tribute to human fragility. The project evolved from Tolvanen’s personal experience with his grandmother’s declining health due to Alzheimer’s:
“Her Alzheimer’s disease is unraveling the fabric of her life, knot by knot, and vaporizing the very core of her personality and life, her memories, and turning her into a shell of a human being.”
Tolvanen used tubular steel as the main ingredient of his creations, he then cut the tubes into small rings and joined them back together to form a semi-covering layer over existing objects. Then, he burnt them:
“My pursuit was to give an object a memory, create tension and stage a play between the perfect, anonymous mass produced structural material and the imperfect of human being. The shell that is left caresses the vanished object, the memory of it, referring to the past.”
Via designboom.com
Dot your Chair by Yayoi Kusama
Yayoi Kusama
Yayoi Kusama is a Japanese artist who worked and grew up in the USA together with Andy Warhol. She is still going strong. She has something with dots and lets children dot a completely white room including the chairs…
As it is raining cats and dogs in my home town, The Hague, I needed to share something really colorful;-)
Savage Chair by Jay Sae Jung Oh
Savage Chair
About the Savage Chair by Jay Sae Jung Oh
Jay Sae Jung Oh ‘s site is another Indexhibit site.
Manufactured objects conspicuously transform into unexpected new forms, making a strong statement about our current cultural condition of abundance. Sharp attention is focused on reconsideration of the ordinary. In this project, I started to collect discarded plastic objects, assembled them together, and wrapped them with a natural material. The transformation occurs in the amalgamated form and the concealment of this form. Innovation, invention, and beauty can emerge from anywhere, even the most familiar, ordinary and everyday.
About Jay Sae Jung Oh
Jay Sae Jung Oh was born and raised in Seoul, South Korea. Educated in the arts of sculpture, she pursued her bachelors and masters degree at Kookmin University. While completing her studies, she worked as a teaching assistant and a professional artist which enabled her to be chosen by Societe Genrale Corporate Investment Bank as one of Korea’s best rising artists. While practicing in the fine arts field, she noticed the importance of design and how it communicates to people in a much more familiar manner. From then on she was challenged and compelled to join the 3d Department at Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, MI, which provided her with a culminating experience which in essence provided her with the flexibility to intertwine both art and design. At the completion of her second Master’s degree, she acquired awards from Design Quest, Cranbrook Art Museum, and nominated as top in the 3d Department for Mercedes-Benz Financial Services Emerging Artist Award.
Ms. Oh is currently working for NYC based, italian designer, Gaetano Pesce, with whom she has gained experience in creating and influencing Mr. Pesce’s products and installations. Her prior work has been received publicly at numerous exhibitions including the Daimler Chrysler Headquarters, Lotte Hotel, Hyundai Department Store, as well as earning a permanent space at the Cranbrook Art Museum collection and Kookmin University