Silas Seandel (born August 11, 1937, New York City) is a furniture sculptor based in New York City.[1][2]
Seandel studied sculpture and economics at the University of Pennsylvania. He graduated in 1950 and opened a studio in 1963, and for over 40 years has commissioned creative pieces of functional art, or sculptured furniture.
Seandel has been profiled by a number of publications during his career, including Interior Design magazine in 1982 (Vol. 53, Issue 12) and Hudson Magazine in 2008 (Vol. 4 Issue 1, 2008). He was also profiled in a chapter of Modern Americana: Studio Furniture From High Craft to High Glam by Julies Iovine and Todd Merill (Rizzoli 2008), describing him as one of the premier metal sculptors in the United States in the late 20th century.
Seandel's works are all handmade in his studio located in the Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan.[3] He uses solid metals such as brass, bronze, steel, copper, etc. There are no enamels, no veneers, or unnatural materials, and all colors are the results of acids and heat treatments which Seandel has developed.
References
edit- ^ LaJoie, Raymond A. (9 February 1968). Welder's torch with artist's touch, Christian Science Monitor
- ^ (11 October 1982). Sculptured Tables, New York (magazine)
- ^ Hanson, Holly (28 October 2000). The Meat Packing District - New York, New York, The Free Lance–Star (Knight Ridder article)("Silas Seandel who has lived in the neighborhood since 1969, and operated a sculpture and furniture studio on West 22nd Street since 1978.")