Blue/Green, Red/Orange, Blue/Black
Blue/Green, Red/Orange, Blue/Black
Blue/Green
Blue/Green
Blue/Green
Blue/Green
Blue/Green
Blue/Green
Blue/Green
Blue/Green
Red/Orange
Red/Orange
Red/Orange
Red/Orange
Red/Orange
Red/Orange
Red/Orange
Red/Orange
Blue/Black
Blue/Black
Blue/Black
Blue/Black
Blue/Black
Blue/Black
Blue/Black
Blue/Black
Blue/Green, Red/Orange, Blue/Black
Blue/Green
Blue/Green
Blue/Green
Blue/Green
Red/Orange
Red/Orange
Red/Orange
Red/Orange
Blue/Black
Blue/Black
Blue/Black
Blue/Black

Archihedron II

Titanium Mobile Sculpture (ID: A167214)
Designed by Matthew Naftzger
$1,700–$1,900
$1,900 $1,700 /
Subscription -

Select an option to add this to your cart.

The artist, Matthew Naftzger, imagines a "future artifact" in this titanium mobile sculpture, imagining a future civilization discovering this mysterious star. Hollow-form constructed and welded from titanium coated with vitreous enamel on each of its six arms. This lightweight sculpture has a ring to be suspended, or can be a tabletop piece.
  • Signed by the artist
  • Red/Orange: Materials: Titanium, Enamel
  • Blue/Black: Materials: Titanium, Enamel, Metal
  • Blue/Green: Materials: Enamel, Metal
  • Shipping Charges are calculated for standard delivery to a single address within the contiguous USA and based on original prices, before discounts.
  • You may return or exchange any item within 14 days of receiving it (except for final sale items, ornament gift boxes, and custom orders). Learn More.
Matthew Naftzger

Matthew Naftzger

matthew.works
"I create artifacts. These are the objects that will be the strange, unexplained relics found in our future."

Matthew’s creations are a mash-up of space traveling circus acts, post-apocalyptic sideshows, Fabergé eggs, rocket-building Cro-Magnon men, wonderfully terrible “B” sci-fi movies, found machine language, societal comment, and internal questions. Whether it’s the lost past or unknown future, these works hope to always invite questions and curiosity.

While these works look to be from another time or place, they are wholly created by Matthew from new, blank materials. Titanium, precious metals, vitreous enamels (glass kiln fired on metal), steel, and bronze all have their places within the work. Pieces are fabricated using many jewelry techniques, along with machining and TIG welding.

After Matthew left the Marines, he went to study engineering and fine art at Colorado State University. He impatiently left early to fully pursue art and fine craft, concentrating on metals. Learning while working with a number of jewelers and painters, he was able to become full time in 2001. The explorations continue.

Customer Reviews

Be the first to write a review
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)