

Can you tell us about your deck of cards?Ī. Another path that you have explored: Tarot deck. In the near future, I plan to collaborate with other found historical objects and such masters. I wanted to preserve him by collaborating with him, creating new pieces of clay and gems in him to energize his theatrical personality and fill with the wonders of the 21st century. I found this dusty and forgotten 19th century cabinet in an antique store and I felt like I could connect to its history like a time machine. I just saw this new thing that you made, you took an old ornate antique cabinet, painted it and filled it with mysterious objects.

I enjoy working with multiple elements that interact with each other to create a multi-faceted whole. Details can develop in unexpected ways, and I can use a much wider variety of materials. Working on many small pieces to create a larger whole frees me up.

you have done a lot of these little things in different configurations.Ī. I have looked back at your work over the past few years and I think your most famous subject may be the tower of 10,000 tiny 2-inch square paintings that you created for the Denver Museum of Art in 2019. Living with it also reminds me that it is possible to create whatever we imagine, that we can, (that) we could still build epic temples if we wanted to. It’s great to see it every day and night, share it with my partner, Dean Pryna, and finally have something for yourself that can’t be sold or taken away. Okay, one last question about the piece: how does it feel to live with it, carry it over your head all day? We think of artists as creating items for sale, but this one is for you, isn’t it?Ī. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz / The Denver Post) The ceiling is inspired by temples and Moroccan art. Said has spent nearly a month using cardboard and cork to create a piece of art for his home that he shares with his partner. This panel is decorative and much more.ĭENVER, CO – SEP 15: Artist Jonathan Saiz at his home in downtown Denver on Wednesday, September 15, 2021. Decorative art sets the tone for the overall space – design calibrates our energy. I wonder how you rate this? Is it decorative for you or is it a painting, a work of art?Ī. I wanted him to become the calm, radiant heart of our home. Without a client to please other than me, I could experiment – even adding rose oil, rose petals, love notes, and other secret magical ingredients to the paint and behind the panels to give it extra ritualistic energy. The inspiration came from a rose motif from the Bahia Palace in Morocco, but it quickly morphed into a mixture of my personal love for Art Deco, Native American fabrics and sacred geometry. Continue reading “Tube chair with a frame made from scaffold tubes – adjustable inclination for the backrest.” Hallway coat hanger and wardrobe made from scaffold pipes and reclaimed wood.A. Nevertheless we advise to spend some time on a nice finish.Ĭhoose nice looking planks, and sand them as smooth as possible before you aooly a woodstain to the planks. This wood is lightly preserved and could even be used without any woodstain. Therefore it has a weathered look and feel to it. This wood has been outside for several years.

Simply dismantle and recycle them in another furniture project. You can repurpose the tube chair parts if you are not happy with the result. Steel tubes and pipe clamps in combination with thick wood from the same scaffold. Weatherproof furniture, made with materials from reclaimed scaffolding. Exploded view construction drawing for a tube chair.Ĭhairs for inside or to use in the garden. scaffold tubes and Kee clamps.Ĭonstruction drawings to make a tube chair from scaffolding pipes. Planters with a slightly different designed edge.Our construction plans for home made furniture concentrate around the use of repurposed wood. Reclaimed pallets can be easily converted into chairs or tables. Easy examples to make furniture at home with just a few basic tools.
