Daniel Michalik Elevates Eco-Friendly Cork in Forest for the Trees


Cork is an infinitely recyclable materials, boasting quite a lot of different options together with hearth resistance, buoyancy, and being naturally hydrophobic. Recognizing the sustainable and delightful traits of the fabric, Brooklyn-based designer and educator Daniel Michalik creates an exhibition of furnishings centered round cork, entitled Forest for the Bushes. Comprising as a lot cork content material as potential, these items both defy gravity, or affirm it. A blocky solidity grounds within the energy and subversive lightness of the fabric, in distinction with the floating cabinets that elevate favourite objects.

When does an object cease changing into merely furnishings and when does it turn out to be cherished, beloved, a memento? A powerful issue is longevity, childhood chairs, tables, and artwork sparking reminiscences lengthy buried. Cork represents this nearly symbiotic relationship aptly, illustrating a fabric that doesn’t require the felling of bushes, permitting them to dwell on. In flip, because the forest takes care of us, we should maintain the forest. This round relationship speaks to accountable stewardship practices, important within the coming many years. Supply materials for the items featured in Forest for the Bushes ranges from reclaimed wine corks to discarded constructing materials, insulation, and upcycled skateboards.

Minimalist room with wooden floor, three modern cork chairs, two box-shaped tables, wall-mounted shelf with decor, and white walls with small art pieces.

A minimalist room with a wooden lounge chair, a small side table holding a vase of pink flowers, a candle, and a box, and a shelf with decor on a white wall.

A minimalist room with sculptural furniture and shelves made of cork and wood, a vase of pink flowers, and geometric art objects displayed on pedestals and walls.

Two sculptural chairs displayed on pedestals: one is blocky with alternating striped and cork layers, the other is rounded and made of textured cork-like material.

The gathering options six new items that mix furnishings, shelving, and small-scale objects, all centered round cork as a sustainable, expressive materials. Every work invitations viewers to rethink what furnishings might be made out of. The Cortiça Chaise Longue measures seven toes lengthy and is handmade fully from 100% recycled cork reclaimed from wine bottle stoppers. Though it seems inflexible, the sculpted kind is intricately sliced to permit a mild rocking movement in a number of instructions. The Striated Seats, with their boxy silhouettes, conceal built-in storage behind vertically striped exteriors made out of plywood, cork, pigment, and upcycled skateboards. Different new works embrace the São Miguel Stool/Aspect Desk, impressed by a visit to the Azores and crafted from compression-molded cork, expanded cork, and pigment; the Santarém Bench, made out of expanded cork and pigment; and the Armless Chair, which reimagines basic seating utilizing recycled cork. Rounding out the gathering are floating cork cabinets, a sequence of cork lamps, a molded youngsters’s chair created throughout a cork molding workshop, and the Mozelos Stool, accessible in three sizes and shaped utilizing expansion-molding strategies.

Geometric sculptures made of cork, cardboard, and foam are displayed on painted wooden plinths; pink flowers and a small reflective sphere sit atop one piece.

A minimalist cork chair sits next to a small side table with a striped front, holding decorative vases/

A glass jar with pink flowers, a cork block with a small bulb, and stacked rectangular blocks made of cork and white speckled material sit on a wooden floor next to a cardboard structure.

A wooden shelf mounted on a white wall holds a textured stone between two rectangular blocks with colorful horizontal stripes and cork surfaces.

A wooden shelf supported by two pieces of bark holds three geometric blocks made of different materials against a white wall.

Wall-mounted wooden shelf with thick cork blocks at each end, holding small cork and wood objects arranged on two shelves against a white wall.

Daniel Michalik is a Brooklyn-based designer and educator working nearly completely with cork for over 20 years. A deep fascination with the fabric offers a powerful basis for his work, permitting him to delve deeper into the potential encased inside. Materials dying in cork manufacturing is principally nonexistent, offering a really round materials in that even the mud can be utilized as biofuel to energy amenities. As novelist and poet Wendell Berry states, “All our bodies, plant and animal and human, are joined in a sort of vitality neighborhood. They’re indissolubly linked in advanced patterns of vitality alternate. They die into one another’s life, dwell into one another’s dying. They don’t eat within the sense of ‘utilizing up’. They don’t product waste. What they absorb, they alter.” Such a pondering will likely be important within the design business, as we reckon collectively with how we wish to outline our future.

A glass jar of pink flowers, a tall twisted brown candlestick with a yellow candle, and a rectangular lamp with an exposed bulb sit on a striped blue and beige table.

Daniel Michalik Picture: Courtesy of Daniel Michalik

To be taught extra about Daniel Michalik and the items proven within the Forest for the Bushes exhibition, which was offered at Hudson Valley’s Obtainable Objects design store and gallery, go to danielmichalik.com.

Images courtesy of Daniel Michalik and Obtainable Objects.

Rising up in NYC has given Aria a novel perspective into artwork + design, always striving for brand spanking new initiatives to get immersed in. An avid baker, crocheter, and pasta maker, handwork and private contact is central to what she loves concerning the constructed atmosphere. Outdoors of town, she enjoys mountaineering, biking, and studying about area.