![]() ![]() The scrapyards, scattered across the Midwest, have been generous. If his heart is fixed on a particular color or traditional quilt pattern – drunkard’s path, maybe, or flying geese – “I’m at the mercy of what I find at the scrapyards,” Rose says. Strips of canary yellow, blocks of rust-speckled orange: All of the color and patina is natural. While his early Shaker interpretations were mostly monochromatic, color defines his quilted works. “It was like, wow, that just really, really translates well.” Rose recognized a congruity between worn fabric and weathered steel, between quilts constructed out of recycled textiles and his own practice of reclaiming scrap metal. In 2003, inspiration struck again, this time at an exhibition of Gee’s Bend quilts at the Milwaukee Art Museum. Rose spent the next seven years exploring his Shaker interpretations in depth, producing some 250 one-of-a-kind works. He had brought in three Shaker-inspired pieces to Nathan, he remembers, when she asked him how many more he could make she was giving him his first solo show. At the time, he was buying metal at the scrapyard because that’s what he could afford reuse has since evolved into an environmental ethic that permeates his practice, from the steel to the nontoxic, natural wax finishes. Rose began researching (“I’ve since acquired so many books”) and building his interpretations in steel: tables, cupboards, clocks. “That was when I really took off making furniture.” ![]() “Seeing their whole life, and that all of it was made by hand, was just so inspiring.” Craftsmanship, quality of materials, integrity of design – the combination was captivating. Just as his parents would have, Rose and his wife stopped at a couple of cultural sites – Shaker museums and settlements in New York and Massachusetts. Not long after, a road trip to the East Coast sparked the distinctive furniture for which Rose is now known. I never know why or how I do a lot of these things, but it was very fresh – and I took a shot.”Īfter some good shows and commissions in the early ’90s, Rose and his wife relocated to Wisconsin, purchasing their property in Door County in the spring of 1994. “It was fresh work,” says Nathan, whose Ann Nathan Gallery today specializes in paintings, sculpture, and studio furniture. “I can’t explain it. Even amid tumult, Nathan was struck by what she saw. The exiled art dealers had set up temporary shop at the city’s Merchandise Mart. A huge fire had recently laid claim to her gallery, Objects, along with eight others in the same building. It was 1989, his last year at SAIC, when Rose walked up to Chicago gallerist Ann Nathan with a Polaroid photo of a jewelry stand he’d made – one of his earliest pieces of furniture. ![]() He also met his future wife, Suzanne, another SAIC student who is now a fine art photographer. As a student of sculpture, he began making jewelry and casting bronze, combining wood and metal. He was hungry for a broad-based art education, but also eager to work more directly with his hands. Rose returned to the United States in the 1980s, studying photography at Bard College for two years before transferring to the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. “My parents were always taking us on trips to see museums, different cultural sites,” he recalls. His father’s employer, a pharmaceutical company, brought the family first to France, then England. Yet Rose’s road to this place – and his perceptive approach to making – began far outside of Wisconsin. The setup suits the thoughtful, grounded artist. A green mechanical shear dominates the shop floor, as colorful pieces of aging steel rest against the walls. Whatever hits first, the magic is almost certainly in how it all comes together.įor 17 years, Rose has been crafting furniture in Door County, Wisconsin, where he lives with his wife, their 10-year-old daughter, Delilah, and a Jack Russell named Daisy. He works in an old creamery, a 100-year-old Belgian-brick structure converted into 2,250 square feet of workspace. Maybe it’s the meticulous craftsmanship, honed skill, and clear vision manifest in his finished forms. Maybe it’s the unexpected material: not wood, but reclaimed steel, soothed with wax finishes. What registers first when you look at Jim Rose’s furniture? Maybe it’s the clean lines of his Shaker-inspired designs, or the bursts of blocky color in the quilt-like panels that brighten drawer fronts and doors. American Craft Council American Craft Council Main navigation ![]()
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