woodn't you believe it?


On view at 303 Gallery in New York, artist Matt Johnson presents 4 cardboard boxes, 5 rolls of painters tape, 2 broken styrofoam chunks, and more garbage… that are all 100% carved and painted wood.


It’s perfection in replication: every wave of corrugation in the cardboard and every tiny pellet that makes up the styrofoam, had to be carved. The play on gravity is mind-boggling – while foam and cardboard appear as weightless as their original counterparts, the concrete bags at center stage look every bit as heavy as their 60 lb originals.
Untitled (3M box), 2016
Untitled (Balancing Styrofoam Corner), 2016
Untitled (Balancing Styrofoam Corner), 2016 (detail)

Just a reminder, that all of this is wood.

Two Bags of Concrete (One on Top of the Other), 2016
The show is dryly titled “Wood Sculpture”, written clearly at the entrance. The gold standard was met on my first visit, when 2 women who had been in the gallery for over 5 minutes finally approached the front desk to ask where the wood sculptures were.
Untitled (Amazon Box), 2016
Untitled (Amazon Box), 2016 (detail)
In my view, “material mimicry/translation”, whether in photo-real paintings or a cardboard box made from wood, is much more than a joke or an artist showing off (though seriously, #props) – for me, it’s all about examination. The insane degree that Johnson had to study EVERY detail of these mundane objects is obvious and incredible, but to view them is to judge their accuracy, and in doing so to discover new unnoticed details of an Amazon box, or the inside of a tape roll, or the particular way that Styrofoam breaks. In short: since exiting this show, I’ve noticed every crushed cardboard box on the sidewalk.
Untitled (4 Stacked Tape Rolls), 2016
Untitled (4 Stacked Tape Rolls), 2016 (detail)
The collection also includes 2 “honest” wood sculptures (they’re not trying to be another material), but are no less impressive. Twisted Pallet (below), looks to be caught in mid-dance, again demanding study and appreciation of the common object it represents.
Twisted Pallet, 2016
What: Matt Johnson “Wood Sculpture”
Where: 303 Gallery, 555 W 21st St, New York, NY
When: January 12 – February 25, 2017

[via design milk]

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Tom Foerstel

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Growing up in the San Francisco Bay Area in the 60’s, Tom developed a strong desire to create positive change for people and planet.

 

He went on to pursue his passion for art and design at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California, and worked for design firms in Southern California before moving to Boise, Idaho in the early 80’s. Foerstel Design opened its doors in 1985. Since its inception, the firm has cultivated a bold, happy, forward-looking team focussed on creating distinct and effective work on behalf of their clients.

 

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One of Tom’s proudest personal achievements is his ability to say Supercalifragilisticexpyalidocious backwards.