Art objects Using humor in designs such as
T for TWO, a shareable split down the middle mug, and
Cocaine Slab, a tray with four linear embedded slots for the perfect line, Errazuriz has been able to create unorthodox solutions. As a designer and artist, Ezzaruris has often used product design elements to explore art vs. design and put forth challenging ideas with such themes as life, death, and religion. Between 2008 and 2009 Errazuriz took on Christianity with his collection of sculptures and objects culminating in his collection
God Saves. The pieces in this series include;
Road Kill;
The Passion of Christ;
Superman Christ;
Saint Sebastian; and
Gulliver. Each piece applies humor to the depiction of Jesus (accept for
Saint Sebastian, where Errazuriz himself is depicted as a martyr in the Catholic canon) in a criticism of religion. In 2012 Errazuriz' once again expanded on his work taking aim at religion when he expressed his intentions to CNN of distributing 100 controversial popsicles he had designed to bring attention to America's growing religious extremism violence. The
Jesus Popsicle Errazuris, which claimed transformed into the blood of Christ, came on a cross-shaped Popsicle stick featuring a laser-engraved image of the crucifixion. In 2014 Errazuriz again displayed his ability to use design objects to tackle controversial political and social issues in
Tough Love. The collection took on a number of issues through 15 pieces such as
The United States of Mexico bringing attention to "Recent statistics show that in some states almost 50% of construction workers are undocumented. This information suggests that many sectors of the U.S. economy are dependent on immigrant labor". This was not the first occasion Errazuriz used clothing and fashion in his work, as he also created customized T-shirt designs from tourists classics by dipping them in dip-dye. These shirts were sold with all proceeds going to the
Hurricane Sandy Relief fund. In 2013 Errazuriz began to reveal his collection
12 Shoes for 12 Lovers, a series of high heels inspired by former relationships. Each pair of heels were accompanied by a story and created with a form reflecting the personalities of one of the 12 women: • Shoe1. "Honey" Natasha: Yellow honeycomb wedge • Shoe2. "Cry Baby" Alexandra: White splash shaped wedge • Shoe3. "Gold Digger" Alison: Gold Heel held up by the statue of Atlas • Shoe4. "Heart Breaker" Laura: Glossy red with cupids arrow going throw the heel • Shoe5. "Ice Queen" Sophie: White with heel in the shape of icicles • Shoe6. "Hot Bitch" Carolina: Red with melting paint • Shoes7. "The Virgin" Anna: White wedge depicting the form of the Virgin Mary on the heel • Shoes8. "The Boss" Rachel: Black with a handle and sharp heel that can be used as a knife • Shoes9. "Jet Setter" Jessica: Red With a jet plane creating the heel • Shoes10. "GI Jane" Barbara: Green with a miniature soldier on the toe • Shoes11. "The Ghost" Valentina: Wire Frame Wedge • Shoes12. "The Rock" Alice: Black wedge with a rigid rocky shape These shoes, created to help Errazuriz explore and reflect on his own relationships, were all accompanied by photos and stories of the individuals they were inspired by. After debuting at the
Art Basel Show in Miami Beach, the collection went viral and has garnered over 35 Million hits on Google.
Furniture Errazuriz is noted for having "expand(ed) the concept of furniture"; and questioning the difference between traditional design and art with his "Functional Sculptures". An example of these furniture sculptures is a series of mechanical cabinets, which "at first glance, the credenzas, cabinets, and boxes may appear simplistically elegant, but they each possess a surprising element. when opened, the interactive works can rotate, spin, and take on new shapes, colors, and forms. Blending advanced technology with traditional craft, the collection seeks to test the limits between sculpture and function." One of these pieces titles
Wave Cabinet has garnered massive interest and over 20 million views online. These furniture pieces can also take on a message of activism. During the 2012
Occupy Wall Street movement, Errazuriz used the likeness and messaging of the Occupy signs, and printed them on the back of white foldable chairs. The chairs began as a concept for use in the actual Occupy Movement spaces and were then given a second use as a way to infiltrate 1% homes with purchased art featuring 99% voices. When the Chairs were presented at The Armory show for purchase Errazuriz's included in part of his artist statement: "The artist wishes to support the 99% by inviting collectors (representing the 1%) to purchase the complaints as art or furniture, thus introducing the ideas of one group into the homes of another and at the same time getting the rich to support the cause of the 99%. As a double-sided mirror, the Occupy Chairs also explore the potential for these complaints against the richest one percent to be transformed into fashionable catchphrases in design-art pieces that celebrate the luxury market." Errazuriz also often repurposed items and forms for his work giving them new life and perspective as functional furniture. From a series of found branches and tree parts from South America, Errazuriz created a collection of shelves tables, allowing nature to help dictate the design. In another series of pieces taxidermy birds, some of which were collected from a taxidermy museum trashcan, were repurposed into multiple pieces including an extravagant chandelier with as many as 50 birds (Bird Chandelier 1), lamps with light bulbs in places of heads (chicken lamp), and even a bird staring into a mirror (On the Edge Staring at Eternal Infinity). In 2018 Errazuriz had his first solo UK show at David Gill Gallery titled
Anything You Destroy We Will Rebuild. In this show he again blurred the line between art and design, this time by incorporating the forms of literal works of art from antiquity, by creating furniture from 3D scanning a digitally altering ancient statues like the Athena Nike. Created from many statues Errazuriz himself revered, the series means to convey both a sense of love and disrespect. By transforming priceless art into usable furniture Errazuriz explores the balances of “tension and release, reverence and sacrilege, delicacy and brutality.” In his Instagram post, Errazuriz argues that in a field that requires 2–3 years of experience, it's almost impossible to compete with the speed of machine learning. An app could be developed to generate designs based on user's preferences and budgets in seconds. The installation was created as part of the
Pledge World by Blue campaign and was meant to act as "a reminder of our miraculously fragile existence. It places our very existence in perspective at a global level – as a tiny spec in space – beckoning us to live fully with awareness and mindfulness of our limited time on this vulnerable and beautiful planet." In recent years Sebastian Errazuriz has focused more and more attention on modern technology, its relationship with art and possible adverse effects on society. In 2017 Errazuriz Founded
Cross Lab, The studio's first project was creating a 3D AR Koons Balloon Dog and covering it with Graffiti, which was geo-tagged in the exact same locations as an anticipated Koon Snapchat collaboration. This Piece titled "Vandalized Balloon Dog" was created as a direct criticism of Koons Partnership with Snapchat "which saw digital 3D versions of the artist's best-known sculptures appear in international tourists hot-spots via
augmented reality". The meaning of the piece as described by the studio was "A symbolic stance against an imminent AR corporate invasion". was created with "highly mechanized technology—robotic arms carved the elegant limb based on CAD drawings—and labor-intensive craftsmanship." With the collaboration of technology and hand craftsmanship, the piece achieved a hyper-detailed form and texture resembling a real tree. On March 7, Erazuriz displayed his public art installation
Blue Marble at Ludlow Street, New York City. The 20 ft LED installation, inspired by Apollo 14's iconic
Blue Marble Photo, displayed Earth using NASA satellite data. The installation was created as part of the
Pledge World by Blue campaign and was meant to act as "a reminder of our miraculously fragile existence. It places our very existence in perspective at a global level – as a tiny spec in space – beckoning us to live fully with awareness and mindfulness of our limited time on this vulnerable and beautiful planet." The app allows artists to upload AR modes of their work that can be seen in real spaces. This in the hopes of selling art during a time of gallery shutdowns and social distancing, while also making AR more accessible for all people.
Public art installations • 2019 –
blu Marble, New York, NY • 2017 –
Augmented Reality artwork vandalized, with Cross Lab, Central Park, New York, NY • 2015 –
A Pause in the City That Never Sleeps, Midnight Moment, curated by Times Square Art,
Times Square, New York • 2014 –
XXth Century Capital,
Industry City, New York • 2013 –
AIDS & Christianity, Brooklyn, New York • 2013 –
Shadow of a Memory,
Rockaway Beach, Queens New York • 2010 –
American Kills,
Brooklyn, New York City • 2010 –
Cross of Light, Santiago, Chile • 2009 –
Death is the only certainty in life,
South Beach, Miami, Florida • 2009 –
Attempt to understand a statistic,
Brooklyn Bridge Park, New York • 2006 –
Memorial of a Concentration Camp,
Estadio Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos (National Stadium), Santiago, Chile • 2005 –
Urban Paradox: a Cow on a Rooftop, Santiago, Chile ==Recognition & honors==