The Family Project Translates Saul Steinberg?s Art Into Furniture
Architect Francesco Paini turns a small drawing from the 1950s into custom, playful wood furniture for the modern day definitions of a family.
In 2017, British-Italian architect Francesco Paini came across a small drawing at the Frieze Art Fair in London. The artwork created by American artist Saul Steinberg in the 1950s seemed to depict a group of rectilinear forms that represented the idea of a family as it relates to the time period ? that is, a father, a mother, two children, and a domestic pet.
This simple yet simultaneously complex drawing is the inspiration for Paini’s Family Project: customizable furniture that celebrates families, friendships, and relationships. Each made-to-order piece is a portraiture of the family, crafted only after a conversation of its intended use, where it?ll be stored, and the type of family to be represented. The wood is either sustainably sourced or leftover wood from Paini?s other projects. Untitled, Mid 1950s, Saul Steinberg
I try to use a very reduced alphabet of signs to express ideas that can be very complex or complicated, which is why drawing is very close to poetry, which uses ordinary words to explain very complex matters.
? Saul Steinberg
While the definitive story behind the drawing hasn?t been discovered, Paini believes it illustrates quite clearly the traditional patriarchal family. This concept of a family has changed and evolved over the time, with today?s modern day interpretation to be very multi-faceted. ...
In 2017, British-Italian architect Francesco Paini came across a small drawing at the Frieze Art Fair in London. The artwork created by American artist Saul Steinberg in the 1950s seemed to depict a group of rectilinear forms that represented the idea of a family as it relates to the time period ? that is, a father, a mother, two children, and a domestic pet.
This simple yet simultaneously complex drawing is the inspiration for Paini’s Family Project: customizable furniture that celebrates families, friendships, and relationships. Each made-to-order piece is a portraiture of the family, crafted only after a conversation of its intended use, where it?ll be stored, and the type of family to be represented. The wood is either sustainably sourced or leftover wood from Paini?s other projects. Untitled, Mid 1950s, Saul Steinberg
I try to use a very reduced alphabet of signs to express ideas that can be very complex or complicated, which is why drawing is very close to poetry, which uses ordinary words to explain very complex matters.
? Saul Steinberg
While the definitive story behind the drawing hasn?t been discovered, Paini believes it illustrates quite clearly the traditional patriarchal family. This concept of a family has changed and evolved over the time, with today?s modern day interpretation to be very multi-faceted. ...
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