Caleb Zipperer
Euchee Bench, 2021
Black Marquina marble
H. 59 x W. 155 x D. 54 cm
H. 23 1/4 x W. 61 1/8 x D. 21 1/4 inches
H. 23 1/4 x W. 61 1/8 x D. 21 1/4 inches
Edition of 8 + 2AP
Copyright The Artist
Photo: Graham Pearson
In a new body of work at Charles Burnand, Zipperer mines the loaded silence of the cypress forests of Ebenezer Creek to create modern day artefacts of a lost history....
In a new body of work at Charles Burnand, Zipperer mines the loaded silence of the cypress forests of Ebenezer Creek to create modern day artefacts of a lost history.
In the “Euchee Bench,” Zipperer imagines that the natural landscape around Ebenezer Creek grew, from the depths of the earth, a piece of furniture for the Euchee, the offspring of the sun. Constructed of a single piece of Verde Guatemala, the bench is inspired by natural geological forms, and serves the simple function of offering a place to rest. Placed on the banks of Ebenezer Creek, it would look like a natural outcrop of the cypress forest.
In the “Euchee Bench,” Zipperer imagines that the natural landscape around Ebenezer Creek grew, from the depths of the earth, a piece of furniture for the Euchee, the offspring of the sun. Constructed of a single piece of Verde Guatemala, the bench is inspired by natural geological forms, and serves the simple function of offering a place to rest. Placed on the banks of Ebenezer Creek, it would look like a natural outcrop of the cypress forest.
7
of
7
