Carpenters Workshop Gallery Los Angeles presents an exhibition celebrating the prolific career of the late architect, sculptor and designer José Zanine Caldas, whose sculptural style and commitment to ecological awareness made him a leading figure in Brazilian modernism. Caldas said, “I learned wood has two lives: the first as a tree; the second as a table and chair, a bed, a broom. The second life is generated by the human hand and spirit”- Raw and sensual in character, the works combine modern elegance with an environmental consciousness that was avant-garde for this radical creator’s time.
Growing up in Belmonte on the west coast of Bahia, Brazil, Caldas found inspiration in the work of local craftspeople who carved each boat from a single felled log. The artist became known for using salvaged elements of wood and ceramics, whether natural waste from the forest, scraps from factories or rubble from demolition sites. This engagement with Brazilian craftsmanship and natural materials underlies all Caldas’ work. Today, his designs remain amongst the most sought-after pieces in the Brazilian modernist canon.
Among the exhibited works is Canoa armchair, whose design centers around the beauty of reclaimed pequi wood and the sublime simplicity of the emblematic canoe form. Constructed from a used canoe, the work rejects modern forms of production and instead proposes a return to traditional techniques, with noticeable tool marks leaving the work of the original craftsperson visible. Stripped of ornamentation and superfluidity, the piece is a modern master’s deeply personal take on a seminal Brazilian form.
Also on display is one of the artist’s most iconic pieces, Namoradeira (loveseat), which gave rise to a new artistic language based on the use of “natural waste”, with softer, smoother shapes marking a closer alliance of craft and design through organic forms. Inspired by traditional Brazilian canoe-building techniques, the benches have a unique structure that allows the seated persons to remain face-to-face.
The exhibition also features works from the Denuncia (protest) collection, mostly made in the artist’s Nova Viçosa workshop from reclaimed timber. With comfort playing an essential role in his design process, Caldas would sit on each piece to make adjustments that suited the proportions. Pieces like Denuncia dining bench and Denuncia dining chair demonstrate Caldas’ innate knowledge of woodworking craftsmanship.
Forming part of Carpenters Workshops Gallery’s historic programming, this exhibition pays tribute to a modernist master who marked an era in 20th century design. Caldas’ sculptural approach, organic craftmanship and sense of environmental responsibility produced a legacy that remains an inexhaustible source of inspiration for designers today.