Set of 3 Bronze & Gold Biomorphic Decorative Bowl Sculptures by Jonathan Adler
About the Item
- Creator:Jonathan Adler (Manufacturer)
- Dimensions:Height: 2 in (5.08 cm)Width: 7 in (17.78 cm)Depth: 3 in (7.62 cm)
- Sold As:Set of 3
- Style:Modern (Of the Period)
- Materials and Techniques:
- Place of Origin:
- Period:
- Date of Manufacture:circa 2012
- Condition:Wear consistent with age and use. In very good original condition with minor surface wear and oxidation to interior from age.
- Seller Location:Troy, MI
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU8950241482802
Jonathan Adler
Potter-turned-home-design guru Jonathan Adler is a man with a peripatetic mind, inspired in equal parts, it seems, by classic modern design, Surrealism and pop culture.
Although his namesake company has expanded into a mini empire touching just about every aspect of modern living — chairs and ice buckets, wallpaper and menorahs, chandeliers and rugs — made in myriad materials, Adler still creates almost every object in clay first. His guiding principle is a simple one: “I make the stuff I want to surround myself with, and I surround myself with it.”
Adler grew up in a New Jersey farm town. His grandfather became a local judge, and his father returned home after graduating from the University of Chicago. “My pop was a brilliantly talented artist. At one point, he had to decide whether to become an artist or a —,” he pauses, searching for the right word, “person.” His father became a lawyer but spent all his free time in his studio, “making art, unencumbered by the need to make money from it. It was a totally pure pursuit.” Adler’s mother, who had worked at Vogue and moved to the rural town reluctantly, was also creative, and both parents encouraged their three children’s creativity.
When he was 12, Adler went to sleepaway camp, where he threw his first pot. “And it was on,” he says. His parents bought him a pottery wheel, and he spent the remainder of his adolescence elbow-deep in clay. Even while majoring in semiotics and art history at Brown University, he hung out at the nearby Rhode Island School of Design, making pots.
Adler moved to New York City, worked briefly in entertainment, and in 1993 returned to his true love, throwing pots (in exchange for teaching classes) at a Manhattan studio called Mud Sweat & Tears. One day, at Balducci’s food market, he ran into Bill Sofield, an old friend who had recently cofounded, with Thomas O’Brien, the now-legendary Aero Studios, a design firm and shop. Sofield paid a studio visit and promptly gave him an order. Then, another friend introduced Adler to a buyer at Barneys New York, who also wrote an order.
For about three years after Adler began devoting himself to ceramics full-time. Despite the street cred of both Aero and Barneys, he also wasn’t really making enough money to live on. Then, in 1997, he teamed with Aid to Artisans, a nonprofit aimed at creating economic opportunity for skilled artisans in developing countries, and traveled to Peru to hire potters who could follow his designs, thus increasing production.
Adler’s first store opened in 1998, in the Soho shopping mecca in Manhattan. He now operates about two dozen shops, as far-flung as London and Bangkok. During Adler’s trip to Peru, he connected not only with potters but also with several talented weavers and decided to branch out into textiles. Other categories followed, leading him to travel the world in search of artisans who could execute his endless supply of ideas. In India, Adler found a man who’s expert at beadwork; he has his limed furniture made in Indonesia, his honey-colored wood pieces in Vietnam.
After a friend asked him to decorate her house, Adler expanded to interior design, taking on hotels as well as private residences — projects for which he remains “agnostic,” using pieces by other designers. “I really try to get to know my clients and then make them seem more glamorous and more eccentric than they think,” he says. “I see myself as a slimming mirror for them.”
Find Jonathan Adler seating, case pieces, decorative objects and other furniture on 1stDibs.
- ShippingRetrieving quote...Ships From: Troy, MI
- Return PolicyA return for this item may be initiated within 1 day of delivery.
More From This Seller
View All1990s American Organic Modern Decorative Bowls
Maple, Burl
Vintage 1980s North American Organic Modern Decorative Bowls
Burl
20th Century Modern Decorative Bowls
Glass
Vintage 1970s American Mid-Century Modern Decorative Bowls
Ceramic
20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Decorative Bowls
Ceramic
20th Century Organic Modern Decorative Bowls
Birdseye Maple
You May Also Like
21st Century and Contemporary American More Desk Accessories
Paper, Plastic
21st Century and Contemporary American Vases
Porcelain
2010s Indian Organic Modern Decorative Bowls
Brass, Bronze
Vintage 1980s American Modern Vases
Ceramic
2010s Brazilian Modern Decorative Bowls
Bronze
Early 2000s American Mid-Century Modern Candelabras
Brass
Recently Viewed
View AllRead More
Video Tour: Jonathan Adler and Simon Doonan Sheltering at Home on Shelter Island
In our "On Location" series on YouTube and Instagram, top designers share their personal spaces while on lockdown. Here, Jonathan Adler and his husband, fashion commentator Simon Doonan, show us their bold beach house on New York's Shelter Island.
Confessions of a (Semi-Retired) Window Dresser
Even though he's been a writer for two decades, Simon Doonan can’t escape from decorating windows.