Coffee Table: An old chicken coop, which now functions as a coffee table, was found at a flea market. Yaron, who is currently building her second Navajo loom, wove this rug from scratch.
Sofa, Left: Originally covered in an eighties pastel fabric, this vintage sofa was found at a secondhand shop on Long Island, then reupholstered in linen and burlap.
Mirror: The salvaged-oak mirror was warmed up with a copper paint job.
Credenza: The TV credenza is made of recycled oak floorboards, cypress, and pine, dyed naturally with tea to create a consistent hue.
Sofa, Right: Scruggs built the frame for this settee out of poplar and oak, then Yaron created complementary tea-dyed linen coverings.
The ladder is from Build It Green! NYC. The dining table in the corner was found at Meeker Avenue Flea Market in Brooklyn. “We deliberated on that piece for a while before we decided the blue faux-wood grain would work in the context,” Nadia says. The organic bamboo shade of the hanging light fixture above the table is by Daniel Rossi. “The clear cube is something Myriah got from one of her old jobs. We filled it with rocks and rope and made the top.”
Nadia painted the kitchen walls a deep navy. Myriah made the cabinet by the stove by sawing a found desk in half and reconfiguring the drawers. The kitchen built-ins are all originals but the couple changed the original cupboard handles to the present wood ones, and painted the hanging light fixture with copper metallic paint.
Myriah built the Cider House bed using salvaged wood from Manhattan water towers. Nadia painted the vintage matelasse quilt with tea dye.
The side table was made by Myriah from plywood, poplar, and oak and was tea-dyed as well.
The crate used as a side table was found in the neighborhood. “We use crates as side tables a lot,” Nadia says. “Myriah made the corner bench for us; nook seating is like a fantasy come true to her.” It has storage bins underneath the cushion and a hinged top. It is made of scrap cedar, pine, and other miscellaneous materials.
Address, date, or similar info here.
For me, the high point of the show is this, which manages simultaneously to be a painting, a force field, and an electromagnetic visual discharge. This is an artist sloughing off old consciousness, making something he doesn’t even know is art, giving up nearly all known languages of painting, and maybe violating the laws of nature by making something that seemingly puts off more energy than went into making it.
Address, date, or similar info here.
For me, the high point of the show is this, which manages simultaneously to be a painting, a force field, and an electromagnetic visual discharge. This is an artist sloughing off old consciousness, making something he doesn’t even know is art, giving up nearly all known languages of painting, and maybe violating the laws of nature by making something that seemingly puts off more energy than went into making it.
Address, date, or similar info here.
For me, the high point of the show is this, which manages simultaneously to be a painting, a force field, and an electromagnetic visual discharge. This is an artist sloughing off old consciousness, making something he doesn’t even know is art, giving up nearly all known languages of painting, and maybe violating the laws of nature by making something that seemingly puts off more energy than went into making it.
Address, date, or similar info here.
For me, the high point of the show is this, which manages simultaneously to be a painting, a force field, and an electromagnetic visual discharge. This is an artist sloughing off old consciousness, making something he doesn’t even know is art, giving up nearly all known languages of painting, and maybe violating the laws of nature by making something that seemingly puts off more energy than went into making it.
Address, date, or similar info here.
For me, the high point of the show is this, which manages simultaneously to be a painting, a force field, and an electromagnetic visual discharge. This is an artist sloughing off old consciousness, making something he doesn’t even know is art, giving up nearly all known languages of painting, and maybe violating the laws of nature by making something that seemingly puts off more energy than went into making it.
Address, date, or similar info here.
For me, the high point of the show is this, which manages simultaneously to be a painting, a force field, and an electromagnetic visual discharge. This is an artist sloughing off old consciousness, making something he doesn’t even know is art, giving up nearly all known languages of painting, and maybe violating the laws of nature by making something that seemingly puts off more energy than went into making it.
Address, date, or similar info here.
For me, the high point of the show is this, which manages simultaneously to be a painting, a force field, and an electromagnetic visual discharge. This is an artist sloughing off old consciousness, making something he doesn’t even know is art, giving up nearly all known languages of painting, and maybe violating the laws of nature by making something that seemingly puts off more energy than went into making it.
Address, date, or similar info here.
For me, the high point of the show is this, which manages simultaneously to be a painting, a force field, and an electromagnetic visual discharge. This is an artist sloughing off old consciousness, making something he doesn’t even know is art, giving up nearly all known languages of painting, and maybe violating the laws of nature by making something that seemingly puts off more energy than went into making it.
Address, date, or similar info here.
For me, the high point of the show is this, which manages simultaneously to be a painting, a force field, and an electromagnetic visual discharge. This is an artist sloughing off old consciousness, making something he doesn’t even know is art, giving up nearly all known languages of painting, and maybe violating the laws of nature by making something that seemingly puts off more energy than went into making it.
Address, date, or similar info here.
For me, the high point of the show is this, which manages simultaneously to be a painting, a force field, and an electromagnetic visual discharge. This is an artist sloughing off old consciousness, making something he doesn’t even know is art, giving up nearly all known languages of painting, and maybe violating the laws of nature by making something that seemingly puts off more energy than went into making it.
Address, date, or similar info here.
For me, the high point of the show is this, which manages simultaneously to be a painting, a force field, and an electromagnetic visual discharge. This is an artist sloughing off old consciousness, making something he doesn’t even know is art, giving up nearly all known languages of painting, and maybe violating the laws of nature by making something that seemingly puts off more energy than went into making it.
Address, date, or similar info here.
For me, the high point of the show is this, which manages simultaneously to be a painting, a force field, and an electromagnetic visual discharge. This is an artist sloughing off old consciousness, making something he doesn’t even know is art, giving up nearly all known languages of painting, and maybe violating the laws of nature by making something that seemingly puts off more energy than went into making it.
Address, date, or similar info here.
For me, the high point of the show is this, which manages simultaneously to be a painting, a force field, and an electromagnetic visual discharge. This is an artist sloughing off old consciousness, making something he doesn’t even know is art, giving up nearly all known languages of painting, and maybe violating the laws of nature by making something that seemingly puts off more energy than went into making it.
Address, date, or similar info here.
For me, the high point of the show is this, which manages simultaneously to be a painting, a force field, and an electromagnetic visual discharge. This is an artist sloughing off old consciousness, making something he doesn’t even know is art, giving up nearly all known languages of painting, and maybe violating the laws of nature by making something that seemingly puts off more energy than went into making it.