

We're curious about how these pieces would look within a home as functional pieces. If any AT readers have any of these pieces in their homes, please send us your photos!
• Upper Playground also offers custom-made furniture orders. Go to their Web site for more information.
Related Posts:
• Upper Playground Artist Series Pillows
• Jeremy Fish "Superficial" accessories
Images: Choe and Saber: Upper Playground; Fish and Flores: John Trippe
that first chair just scares me...
view Jess2nola's profile
goes to show that artists don't make chairs....
they make things they think function as chairs...
but not really chairs...
a seat and a back do not a chair make...
view khanzen's profile
yeah, that David Choe chair freaks me out too.
view travislessness's profile
ive always liked upper playground. in my opinion even though its labeled "chair" its still suppose to be art. and when you talk about art, its always a matter of opinion. personally, i enjoy that. =D
view serrakat's profile
that chair is creep! I can't image it in a house.
view josephine s.'s profile
I'm going with khanzen here and expand on it. The creepiness of the image of the chair is mostly the disregard for human proportion. Its waist goes all the way to the seat and the shoulders are weird. Then it's not really a chair, it's lumber, a box with a back. A child of about 9 or 10 draws a figure of a man with very wide straight shoulders and skinny arms that hang straight down and away from the body, and runs out of room for the legs at the bottom of the paper. That's what I see when I look at it, so the scary mask face and the heart on the outside get upstaged.
view K T G's profile
My reaction to this furniture:
"Oh no, not in MY house you don't!"
view kuroneko's profile