BACKGROUND
A
sought after artist and designer, Peter Gutkin continually pursues
his fine art/design career. The Whitney Museum of American Art (www.whitney.org),
Laforet Museum (Tokyo), San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (www.sfmoma.org),
Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (www.mcachicago.org),
the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia (www.icaphila.org),
and many others have exhibited his work.
Gutkin
received his Bachelor of Fine Art from Tyler School of Art of Temple
University (www.temple.edu/tyler),
and received his Master of Fine Art from San Francisco Art Institute
(www.sanfranciscoart.edu).
He acquired a wide variety of skills including stone and wood carving,
metalsmithing, bronze and plaster casting, low and high fire ceramics,
fine art, and a strong foundation in art history.
In
1990, Gutkin was the sole U.S. representative at the International
Furniture Design Fair in Asahikawa, Japan. He won the prestigious ROSCO Award for decorative lighting in 1986,
and was a National Endowment for the Arts Fellow (www.nea.gov)
in 1980 and 1984.
Gutkin
has taught at the University of California, Berkeley (www.berkeley.edu),
the San Francisco Art Institute, (www.sanfranciscoart.edu)
and the California College of Art
in Oakland (www.cca.edu). He continues
to mentor apprentices in his atelier where they receive credit towards
their degrees.
For
over twenty years he worked closely with his late wife, interior
designer Vicky Doubleday, collaborating on residential and commercial
projects such as Scharffenberger Cellars and NASA Ames Reasearch
Center (www.arc.nasa.gov) for which
he not only designed interior space but also designed and produced
site specific furniture. Since then Gutkin has produced countless
pieces of one-off furniture for clients. Recently he has designed lighting
fixtures for Boyd lighting (www.boydlighting.com).
His art and furniture are included in many public and private collections for enjoyment as
well as future investment.
DESIGN
PHILOSPHY
Gutkin's
approach to design is expressed through its distilled form, classical
proportions and understated elegance. The details are refined, with
subtle and restrained nuances. Its timelessness and simple beauty
is unaffected by changing fads. Void of clutter and adornament,
its elegance is imbued with modesty. Its earthy aura evokes botanical
and organic allusions.
Gutkin's
roots derive from the Twentieth Century French Modernists along
with the American Arts and Crafts movement. Pierre Chareau, Jean-Michel
Frank, Constatin Brancusi, Gustav Stickley, and Greene and Greene
have most strongly influenced his ouvre and artistic development.
THE
WORK
Rather
than being industrially produced, each piece is benchmade by a coterie
of highly skilled artisans, and is valued for its individual craftsmanship.
Materials are hand selected for quality with no compromise for expense.
After assembly, each item is signed, dated, and inspected prior
to being shipped from our San Francisco atelier.
The
body of work is enjoyed for its aesthetics, functionality, and collect-ability.
These are modern antiques for the future.
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