The 24 objects that make up Jackson Martin’s Making Amends series show the great, sometimes illogical lengths the Asheville, North Carolina–based sculptor has gone to repair mass-produced everyday objects with striking, handcrafted solutions. On view together for the first time in a solo exhibition at Tennessee Tech’s Appalachian Center for Craft in Smithville, Tennessee, through July 11, Martin’s clever interventions transform cast-off objects into one-of-a-kind heirlooms, infusing the pieces with a dose of humor and irony.
Making Amends No. 5 (Styrofoam Cooler) (2019), for instance, replaces the broken foam lid with one fashioned out of quilted insulation fabric, a solution that may last longer than the expendable cooler itself. The seventh entry in the series, subtitled Laura’s Laundry Basket (2019), supplants one of the plastic hamper’s plain gray grips with a two-toned handle crafted from steam-bent ash and cherry wood.
In another work, Martin recreated a child’s safety gate from milled walnut and replaced the plastic latticework with a two-way mirror. The resulting sculpture, 2020’s Making Amends No. 14 (Baby Gate 2), reflects on widespread surveillance in modern culture, musing about how even innocent devices can serve as tools of omniscient observation.
Making Amends No. 14 (Baby Gate 2), 2020, broken baby gate, milled walnut, two-way mirror, hardware, C-print, 23 x 42 x 3 in.
