September 21, 2023

FALLINGFILM

Make Some Fun

Tatiane Freitas Meticulously Splices Up to date Acrylic Parts Onto Conventional Picket Furnishings — Colossal

2 min read



Artwork
Design

#chairs
#furnishings
#sculpture
#Tatiane Freitas

August 4, 2023

Kate Mothes

A wooden chair that has broken pieces replaced with acrylic molded to complete the design.

All photographs © Tatiane Freitas, shared with permission

Hitting peak reputation within the mid-Twentieth century, acrylic furnishings—typically branded as Lucite—represented a contemporary, trendy tackle historically practical objects, from tables to headboards to kitchen chairs. The clear thermoplastic can simply steal the present in a room, drawing consideration to its personal silhouette and contrasting the furnishings that encompass it. São Paulo-based artist Tatiane Freitas faucets into the legacy of the fabric and the connection between previous and current in her ongoing My New Outdated Collection.

Redolent of kintsugi, a Japanese philosophy that embraces breakage and restore as a part of the historical past of objects, Freitas molds strikingly clear replacements for chair arms, spindles, and seats. The artist “goals to discover the dynamic between the previous versus current, outdated versus younger, and the way this pressure may be introduced in a bodily state,” she says in a press release. The plastic matches exactly into place and mirrors its picket counterparts, creating an impact that’s each stable and spectral.

Freitas has not too long ago translated her full-size sculptures into miniature variations that seem to drift on the wall, a number of of that are at the moment on view at Guy Hepner in New York Metropolis by way of the top of this month. You can even discover extra work on the artist’s website and Instagram.

 

Two wooden chairs that have broken pieces replaced with acrylic molded to complete the design.

A detail of a wooden chair that has broken pieces replaced with acrylic molded to complete the design.

Two images. On the left, an ornate mirror frame has been partially replaced with a geometric shape of acrylic. On the right, a wooden chair has had a leg and the seat replaced with clear acrylic.

A three-legged wooden table has part of the top and one leg replaced with clear acrylic.

A wooden chair has the seat, part of the back, and one leg replaced with clear acrylic.

Tiny wooden chairs with parts replaced in clear acrylic, installed on a wall.

“The Ripple Impact”

A wooden coffee table with one leg and the top replaced with clear acrylic.

Tiny wooden chairs with parts replaced in clear acrylic, installed on a wall.

“The void created”

#chairs
#furnishings
#sculpture
#Tatiane Freitas

 

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