Tables | Chairs |
Manmade
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In the Mid 1980’s, I started making a line of furniture and knicknacks under the name MANMADE. Unlike many artists, I enjoy making multiples, and I also enjoy the middle ground where function and art meet.
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This is a picture from Metropolitan Home Magazine, December 1989, that shows the beginning of my line. I began with a few simple metal items- candlesticks, lamps, tables and chairs.
Over a period of about 10 years, this line expanded, with somewhere over 200 different objects being made at one time or another. Some of these were one of a kinds, but most were limited production pieces, with between 3 and several hundred pieces made.
The Manmade line continued until the late 90’s, with somewhere over 200 stores around the country selling the work at one point or another, and a few pieces finding their way to places as diverse as Japan, Germany, and Abu Dhabi.
I estimate that I produced somewhere over 10,000 pieces in that time, including almost 2000 chairs. At one point I was “The King Of Chairs” with over 100 different designs available.
I sold items stamped “Manmade” in almost every state, and would hope that by now they would begin turning up at flea markets and garage sales, the true mark of a lasting consumer good.
All were made from steel, mostly hand cut and bent, welded and then finished either with baked on enamels, or powedercoated.
I am no longer making any of these pieces, and they are not available. I have moved my focus to large scale public projects, and this takes up all my time, and then some, so these pictures of small objects are purely for historical interest.
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One of the very first pieces I made was a small candlestick of a dancing man, called a “Smitty”. At the time, I had my studio in a small industrial complex from the 1940’s in Inglewood California, and one of my neighbors was an old machinist known only as Smitty. Smitty was always interested in what I was working on, helpful with advice and instruction, and I got to be quite fond of him. One day, Smitty did not show up for work- he had died in his sleep the night before. So I named this candlestick after him, to remember him.
I first made a dozen of these candlesticks, slowly and by hand. I sent pictures to a few stores I had heard of around the country, and was immediately sent orders from NYC, Chicago, and a few other cities around the country.
Smitty production geared up, as they sold in more and more stores. After the first hundred or so, I realized I needed a way to make more, and to bring the price down. So I had a pattern made, and we began casting them in iron, then hand detailing them. I sold Smitties for over a year, and then began seeing knockoffs. One day, I walked into a Bed Bath and Beyond store in Beverly Hills, and saw a table with at least a hundred copies of Smitties sitting on it. Of course, they looked like they had been made out of bent coathangers, and sprayed from a can, but the writing was definitly on the wall.
I chose to heed the advice of Satchel Paige, who once said “Don’t look back- they might be gaining on you”, and I discontinued production of the Smitties soon afterwards, with somewhere around 1200 of the orginals out there in the world. Since then, I have seen Smitty copies, clones, and variants made in just about every third world country you can think of- I have seen Haitian, African, Indonesian, Thai, Chinese, and Pakistani Smitties.
I think of the Smitty as my personal foreign aid program- I have no doubt helped hundreds more people around the world than Sally Struthers.
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A pair of triple Smitty lamp, with a perforated metal lamp shade
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There were many variations on the simple dancing man form that I made over the years- big ones, little ones, devils and angels, andirons, candlesticks, fireplace tools, lamps, valets, and others.
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Another product we made hundreds and hundreds of was this simple Gecko soap dish. Cut from one piece of metal, then hand folded, each was a little different. Again, at a certain point I began seeing whole villages in Pakistan engaged in copying the design, and I stopped making them.
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A hand candlestick, painted textured black with brass detailing.
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The ladderback chair, which is about 3 feet tall, and the flame chair, which is a foot tall, were popular small chairs. These two were also candlesticks, but I made hundreds of little chairs that were just that-minature chairs. Every time I made them, people took them away from me- I dont know what they do with them, but there are a lot of my baby chairs out there, too small for actual babies, but no doubt being sat on by all manner of small creatures.
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