I know Christmas is two days late but whatever.
ANyways, this is just some art that my friend, KortneyBot wanted me to do with her friend’s oc. I hope you like this Kortney.
Goldfish belongs to = @kortneybot
Marc belongs to = @vanuhtee
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye
seen from Norway

seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Greece

seen from Türkiye

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Colombia
I know Christmas is two days late but whatever.
ANyways, this is just some art that my friend, KortneyBot wanted me to do with her friend’s oc. I hope you like this Kortney.
Goldfish belongs to = @kortneybot
Marc belongs to = @vanuhtee
Biophilia
Nature Reimagined May 5, 2024 – August 11, 2024
Biophilia: Nature Reimagined brings together more than 80 imaginative works, including architectural models and photographs, objects, fashion, digital installations, and immersive art experiences that collectively highlight the transformative power of nature.
Biophilia: Nature Reimagined brings together more than 80 imaginative works, including architectural models and photographs, objects, fashio
Marc Fish. British, born 1971, active in Newhaven, England
Ethereal Double Console, 2022 Sycamore veneers and resin 39⅜ × 110¼ × 15¾ in. (100 × 280 × 40 cm) Courtesy of Sarah Myerscough Gallery. © Marc Fish. Photograph by James Florio, courtesy of the Denver Art Museum. Cat. 15
See further details on the next post.
*Biophilia: Nature Reimagined* brings together more than seventy imaginative works, including architectural models and photographs, objects,
Marc Fish was delighted to have a console table in Biophilia: Nature Reimagined, at Denver Art Museum.
Organised by Darrin Alfred, Curator of Architecture and Design at the Denver Art Museum, Biophilia: Nature Reimagined explores the transformative role that contemporary architects, artists, and designers play in reexamining and reanimating our intrinsic bond with nature.
Use the search facility, top right, to find Marc's console table and more information.
*Biophilia: Nature Reimagined* brings together more than seventy imaginative works, including architectural models and photographs, objects,
Made from sycamore and resin in a very organic sculptural form. Elegant and sinuous the piece shows real grace but also an unequivocal energ
Ethereal Drinks Cabinet. With wall mounted bar / console
Made from sycamore and resin in a very organic sculptural form. Elegant and sinuous the piece shows real grace but also an unequivocal energy. The Ethereal series utilises unique techniques developed solely in Marc Fish's Studio in the UK. His work can be found in private homes in all corners of the globe - the Ethereal series sits well with more traditional furniture or contemporary modern pieces. The Ethereal series is the epitome of innovation from the studio that has become popular among collectors.
The Ethereal furniture is made from Marc's usual laminated veneers, with the important difference that he leaves negative space between them – treating them not as layers within a solid stratigraphy, but as fins within a more open structure. He then pours resin over these delicate, paper-thin armatures. The use of frosting and tinting in the resin produces mesmerizing visual effects, like sunlight through water currents or tree canopies. The principle of visual movement, which has been central to Marc's work for years, is quite literally transformed into another dimension. Having drawn his line and followed it this far, he is now moving beyond, exploring the more elusive and evanescent movements of space itself.
The skills of a craftsman: Perserverance
The Ethereal drinks cabinet doors glide sideways to reveal laminated shelves holding glasses and bottles, each shelf peeling away from the centre upright. The back panel's grain follows the form of this feature and the pattern continues outwards towards the open doors. This single design feature contains 2000 pieces of hand-cut veneer.
Marc appeared in the Financial Times on September 20th 2019. The piece covered his design ethos and ambitions prior to showing with Todd Merrill at PAD London.
Marc Fish is one of several ambitious makers whose furniture aims to excite.
You can read the article here on Todd Merrill’s site - https://toddmerrillstudio.com/financial-times-september-21-2019/ or if you happen to be an FT member the article can be found here: Designer Marc Fish on making furniture that excites and haunts
The Design Edit
In the Newhaven studio of furniture-maker Marc Fish, Claudia Barbieri discovers how the designer bends wood to his will.
17th September 2019
ONE MIDNIGHT IN July, the SushiSamba restaurant at 110 Bishopsgate, high above London’s financial district, closed earlier than usual and a team of workmen moved in. Taking infinite care they manoeuvred three intriguing objects, made from around 5,000 wood shavings layered and interleaved with resin, into the service lift that whisked them to the 39th floor of the building formerly known as Heron Tower. There, working against the clock with chronometric coordination, installers, electricians and riggers assembled the objects into a 2.5-metre-wide, light-emitting, revolving conch.
“We had to make the pieces the right size to fit through a metre-wide lift door – there was just 15 millimetres clearance,” says the designer Marc Fish. “At 4 o’clock in the morning it was finally being winched into place, just as the sun was rising behind it.” SushiSamba’s marine mollusc is pure Fish: organic form; technical complexity; extreme precision and creative innovation. “It was quite a special night for us. The restaurant opened at 10 am the next morning all cleaned up, almost as if we hadn’t been there – except there was a large shell hanging from the ceiling,” says Fish.
Country & Town House, April 2019 featured Marc Fish’s work in its On Design News about What’s New. It says:
INCREDIBLE CARPENTRY The Ethereal desk by Marc Fish is made from thin veneers of sycamore, laminated and shaped into curves and held with resin. $130,000 from Todd Merrill gallery. marcfish.com
View the Article here - http://marcfish.com/docs/ CountryandTownhouse-April2019.pdf