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22 January 2025
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John Cederquist
John Cederquist: Art-Chair "Saw-Shimi" Lounge Side Chair
, 1997
41 x 29 x 29 in. (104.1 x 73.7 x 73.7 cm.)
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John Cederquist
American, born 1946
John Cederquist: Art-Chair "Saw-Shimi" Lounge Side Chair
,
1997
John Cederquist
John Cederquist: Art-Chair "Saw-Shimi" Lounge Side Chair
, 1997
41 x 29 x 29 in. (104.1 x 73.7 x 73.7 cm.)
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for more images
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Medium
Sculpture, Design, Art Chair Sculpture Japanese Jointery
Size
41 x 29 x 29 in. (104.1 x 73.7 x 73.7 cm.)
Markings
Signed by the artist, by Hand done, "sand etching" achieved by burning hot sand into the wood. Each line is made by using hot sand which burns soft shaded lines into the wood surface.
Price
Price on Request
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Jeffrey Spahn Gallery
San Francisco
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About this Artwork
Movement
Contemporary Art, Contemporary Design
Provenance
Private Collection, Beverly Hills, California USA
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Description
This is a very Playful Art Chair. John Cederquist is a master woodworker who specializes in Japanese joinery . The art of Japanese joint wood-working craftsmanship is well used in this art chair, and the artist has used it to demonstrate not only his mastery of the craft but also his play "pun" on the art of cutting sushi or sashimi salmon fish with a wood saw. The artist has also used his incredible control of the art of sand etching wood with hot sand to make all of the art drawing on the wood. each line is achieved by placing hot sand on the wood and letting it burn soft shaded lines into the wood surface to make the drawings appear. . Born in Altadena, California, John Cederquist is a woodworker and furniture maker whose trompe l’oeil artworks masterfully invert dimension. Cederquist received both his BFA (1969) and MA (1971) from California State University, Long Beach. After completing his studies, he maintained a studio practice for several years before accepting a position at Saddleback Community College in Mission Viejo, California, in 1979. He became fascinated with perspective and dimension while teaching a design class and decided to meld trompe l’oeil illustration with furniture making. Cederquist creates his technically functional – yet primarily visual – works by overlaying wooden forms with a variety of puzzle-like inlays, often using the natural grain of different woods to confuse perspective. References to comics, pop culture, and Japanese printmaking permeate his three-dimensional, yet visually flat, works. Cederquist retired from Saddleback as professor emeritus in 2008. He continues to maintain a studio and has mounted solo exhibitions at museums and galleries around the country. His work has been collected by many prominent museums including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the Art Institute of Chicago. He won the 2010 Award of Distinction from the Furniture Society and received several fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts (1975, 1986). John Cederquist was elected a Fellow of the American Craft Council in 2002.
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