Hand Carved Maple Pedestal, Large
Hand Carved Maple Pedestal, Large
Hand Carved Maple Pedestal, Large
Hand Carved Maple Pedestal, Large
Hand Carved Maple Pedestal, Large
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  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Hand Carved Maple Pedestal, Large
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Hand Carved Maple Pedestal, Large
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Hand Carved Maple Pedestal, Large
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Hand Carved Maple Pedestal, Large

Hand Carved Maple Pedestal, Large

Regular price
$1,400.00
Sale price
$1,400.00
Regular price
Sold out
Unit price
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Artist: Park Kyoung Yoon
Maple Wood
Dimensions:  7W x 11H

Artist Pak Kyoung Yoon lives a monastic lifestyle all in an effort to strip away as much as he can and live as simply as possible. His ethos is reflected in his work – minimal, exact, with nothing left to take away. The artist refuses all machines, and works daily with his two hands and a chisel making his extraordinary art pieces a living object of his process and creativity. Pak has finished his Hand Carved Maple Wood Pedestal with Oak Charcoal Powder which creates a dark cast and water glass in order to highlight every point the human has touched the wood. 

Care: Hand wash only. Please dry after each wash with a soft cloth. It is safe for tableware that touches food and is water-resistant, but cannot hold water.
Namu Home Goods maple Wood Plate Wabi Sabi

My work is just a small fragment of that ordinary routine.

Pak Kyoung Yoon lives a near monastic life. He has a regimented routine and works within the same small boundaries every day: The artist wakes up at 2 am – before the grass bugs – and spends his days digging and scratching at wood. He eats three meals a day. There is value in repetition and this repetition is what holds him – and his entire life – together. He is content in his small life – in fact, he believes the whole universe can exist in a bowl or plate. Pak started woodworking while living in a rural Polish town – a practice that helped him endure some of his darkest moments. The artist made himself a guitar using a small chisel, a saw, and a hand plane – and the single note that rung out in the empty silence solidified his future work. The artist pursues an egoless existence. He writes: “I am constantly working to abandon myself. I work according to the day, without a sketch, and am led by the weather and my mental state. What remains of my work is my daily diary. I don't make anything. I’m just living a normal life. Like eating and sleeping, but not thinking about sleeping or eating itself. The beauty of the material of the tree lies in living and breathing. But the important thing is not to be alive, but to die, to self-destruct in nature. The repetition of digging and digging and erasing traces does not produce meaning or thoughts, but erases them. There is truth in constant repetition, daily repetition. It's just that I live from day to day by day. My work is just a small fragment of that ordinary routine.”

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