Contemporary Bronze Triple Tray With Polished Interior, Signed Arno Declercq
$3,800
1st Dibs
Bronze Triple Tray - Signed Arno DeclercqMeasures: 30 cm L x 28 cm W x 19 cm H (11.8” L x 11” W x 7.5” H)Material: bronzeSigned by Arno Declercq--Arno Declercq--Belgian designer and art dealer who makes bespoke objects with a passion for design, atmosphere, history, and craft. Arno grew up in a family with parents who like to work with beautiful brands and objects. His father studied at the Royal Academy of Arts Fashion Department; he worked for Bikkembergs and made his own fashion brands, but has also collected tribal art for more than 20 years. His mother, who worked with his father from the beginning, bought a shoe store in 2010 where they sold brands such as Rick Owens, Ann Demeulemeester, and Maison Martin Margiela. With the interest in beauty that he learned from his parents, Arno studied interior design; after learning a lot about materials and with great knowledge of history, he designed interiors and opened his own gallery for ethnographic art and design. The collection has come to the idea that there are too few interiors where they no longer have the big and static vases and candlesticks that the people had in big houses over 100 years ago. By focusing on architecture, ancient arts and design, after-war buildings, defense buildings (bunkers and fortresses), and tribal arts, he created a collection that became a Classic. Each piece is unique because it is entirely handcrafted by him. Made of tropical hardwood called Iroko, which he discovered after one of his many trips to West Africa, where he developed an interest in voodoo arts. In these strange tribal arts, the wood "Iroko" is used in many objects; according to their culture, the ancestors live in these trees, and they also call this tree "the king of the forest".Arno also combines this with Belgian oak, which has dried for more than 30 years, and wood that was provided for many furniture makers in Mechelen. Treating these objects through the Yakusugi technique or another mentioned "Shou Sugi Ban", an ancient Japanese technique where the objects are burned to protect the wood from weathering and subsequently fixed to get a patina look as long as possible. This gives each object a unique texture.