The Week in Craft: July 25, 2018
Your weekly dose of links about craft, art, design, and whatever else we’re excited about sharing
Site-specific installation artist Karin van der Molen creates a waterfall of chairs emanating from old, uninhabited villas.
Sculptural hands literally lift up Vietnam’s Da Nang Golden Bridge into the sky, allowing for some truly spectacular views.
If you love Ron Arad's wild furniture, you'll want to read this illustrated essay by Glenn Adamson.
A former vocational high school in south Philadelphia was recently turned into a maker space known as the Bok, and it's starting to attract a new group to the city.
Luxury brand Hermes created a film series with documentary maker Frédéric Laffont to highlight sustainable development with it's Footsteps Across the World collection.
Detroit printer Signal Return Press pairs six artists with community-based nonprofit organizations to highlight their work with custom-designed prints.
The annual San Francisco Art Book Fair took over a community space in Dogpatch this past weekend. The 3-year-old event continues to highlight the “bay area counterculture.”
The 19th-century ceramic cat sculpture that was a favorite of painter Claude Monet has returned to the artist’s house in Giverny, France, according to Art Newspaper.
Don’t miss the American Craft Show in San Francisco on August 3 – 5. Join us at Fort Mason Center for Arts & Culture, right on the water, and check out more than 250 makers and a variety of experiential programming.