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Contemporary Art Furniture: Sam Maloof, John Cederquist, Wendy Maruyama

Details

Start:
Mar 3, 2001 at 12 a.m.
End:
Jun 10, 2001 at 12 a.m.
Event Category:

Contemporary Art Furniture

This exhibition will present the work of three contemporary furniture makers — Sam Maloof, John Cederquist and Wendy Maruyama — who work in widely varying styles. Each has had significant impact on the field and continues to do so. Maloof creates functional furniture with uncluttered design, rhythm and flow. Cederquist’s works combine elements of historic furniture with illusionistic effects of tromp l’oeil (“fool the eye”) surface painting, references to art history, and humor. Maruyama’s work combines training in traditional techniques with a commitment to sculpture shapes, painted surfaces and expressive content.

About the Artists

Sam Maloof (b.1916) started making furniture immediately after World War II, when there was little demand for the handmade object. His functional work appears deceptively simple with its uncluttered design, unassuming and natural qualities, and its exceptional technical mastery. John Cederquist (b. 1946) references historic furniture in his work but freely interprets traditional forms with illusionistic effects of trompe lõoeil surface painting, references to art history and humor. Wendy Maruyama (b.1952) discovered woodworking in the late 1960s, when craft programs were expanding throughout the country. Her work combines training in traditional techniques with a commitment to sculptural shapes, painted surfaces and expressive content.

ASU Art Museum Presentation

Organized by Heather Sealy Lineberry, Contemporary Art Furniture will be installed in the 2,500-square-foot Turk Gallery of the Arizona State University Art Museum at the Nelson Fine Arts Center.

Duration

Contemporary Art Furniture (March 3 – June 10, 2001) is open Tuesday from 10 am to 9 pm, Wednesday through Saturday from 10 am to 5 pm, and Sunday from 1 pm to 5 pm.

Support

The exhibition is supported in part by Friends of the Arizona State University Art Museum.

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