The Patrick birdhouse by Jason Sargenti, 2020
$600.00Handmade architectural birdhouse by Jason Sargenti, hand-signed dated, USA 2020.
"Influenced by the hybrid cool of Hans Hollein (Austrian Travel Agency Headquarters) and the painter Nagel's Deco revival styling. The house is all about the shadows that fall from the trees." J Sargenti
Made of a birdhouse with subtle geometric pattern, painted wood with sand paper and metal highlights.
8” x 5 3/4” x 6”
Part of the exhibition "The Architect's Birdhouses" by Jason Sargenti at PHX Gallery, Aug 31 to Sept 13 2023.
The Patrick birdhouse is an hommage to the life-size brass palm trees of the Austrian Travel Agency headquarters in Austria (completed 1978, demolished 1987) designed by Hans Hollein. Hans Hollein’s metallic gold palm trees are a radical-design element that became a flag-like sign in design language, like an emoji. The bright lilac body of this birdhouse with its arched top stands behind two painted sand-paper columns acting as trunks for the brassy, generous palms handmade by Jason Sargenti. Shiny silver rings adorn the columns, topped with teal rectangles underneath the palms, resembling massive art-deco flower pots. This DNA grants the Patrick birdhouse a true post-modern identity: past, present and future, together now.
The Patrick birdhouse is an hommage to the life-size brass palm trees of the Austrian Travel Agency headquarters in Austria (completed 1978, demolished 1987) designed by Hans Hollein. Hans Hollein’s metallic gold palm trees are a radical-design element that became a flag-like sign in design language, like an emoji. The bright lilac body of this birdhouse with its arched top stands behind two painted sand-paper columns acting as trunks for the brassy, generous palms handmade by Jason Sargenti. Shiny silver rings adorn the columns, topped with teal rectangles underneath the palms, resembling massive art-deco flower pots. This DNA grants the Patrick birdhouse a true post-modern identity: past, present and future, together now.
The Patrick birdhouse is an hommage to the life-size brass palm trees of the Austrian Travel Agency headquarters in Austria (completed 1978, demolished 1987) designed by Hans Hollein. Hans Hollein’s metallic gold palm trees are a radical-design element that became a flag-like sign in design language, like an emoji. The bright lilac body of this birdhouse with its arched top stands behind two painted sand-paper columns acting as trunks for the brassy, generous palms handmade by Jason Sargenti. Shiny silver rings adorn the columns, topped with teal rectangles underneath the palms, resembling massive art-deco flower pots. This DNA grants the Patrick birdhouse a true post-modern identity: past, present and future, together now.
"The motivation for making these birdhouses came from a desire to provide some contrast in my surroundings. Initially, I would purchase ugly birdhouses and renovate them. My plan included distributing them to open fields around my rural Upstate NY community, to provide homes for songbirds. Eventually those were all either stolen or used as target practice by the locales. The proceeding iterations, made during quarantine, were less for distribution to a hostile community and more to maintain my own sanity. The resulting constructions are fantasies, speculations and inspiration that continue a discourse in speculative design." J Sargenti
JASON SARGENTI's BIRDHOUSES
"My formative years were split between New York City and Florida in the 1980s and '90s. On weekends during the school year, my mother would drag me around South Florida, documenting the beach homes of money launderers and narcotics importers for a popular design magazine. During the summer, I would follow my cooler older brother around SoHo as he delivered "fashion" to celebrity photo shoots.
Like many who create things, I attended design school, where I was told my colorful creations were unrelatable and just plain terrible. My faculty was unwilling or unable to provide context for what interested me. It was only in the last several years that I began to piece together the historical context that exerted so much influence over me (that which people label generically as the '80s).
My perspective is less a longing for the return to the age of decadence and more a feeling that there is fertile ground to mine for ideation." J Sargenti
Jason Sargenti is a New York State-licensed architect with a body of built work in the private and public sectors, an experienced university educator, and an expert generalist with a skills base in project management, building technology, historic masonry restoration, site planning, and sustainable design. He holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from The New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University and a Master of Architecture from the Rhode Island School of Design.
"My formative years were split between New York City and Florida in the 1980s and '90s. On weekends during the school year, my mother would drag me around South Florida, documenting the beach homes of money launderers and narcotics importers for a popular design magazine. During the summer, I would follow my cooler older brother around SoHo as he delivered "fashion" to celebrity photo shoots.
Like many who create things, I attended design school, where I was told my colorful creations were unrelatable and just plain terrible. My faculty was unwilling or unable to provide context for what interested me. It was only in the last several years that I began to piece together the historical context that exerted so much influence over me (that which people label generically as the '80s).
My perspective is less a longing for the return to the age of decadence and more a feeling that there is fertile ground to mine for ideation." J Sargenti
Jason Sargenti is a New York State-licensed architect with a body of built work in the private and public sectors, an experienced university educator, and an expert generalist with a skills base in project management, building technology, historic masonry restoration, site planning, and sustainable design. He holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from The New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University and a Master of Architecture from the Rhode Island School of Design.
"The Architect's Birdhouses"
by Jason Sargenti
EXHIBITION CHICAGO UPTOWN
AUG 31 - SEPT 13, 2023
BY APPOINTMENT
INFO@PHXGALLERY.COM
AUG 31, 5-7PM
>>> BOOK APPOINTMENT