NÃO PODEMOS FECHAR OS OLHOS PRA O QUE ESTAVA ACONTECENDO NESSE MOMENTO. AS PESSOAS PRECISAM DE AJUDA E SUPORTE, QUASE 300 MIL PESSOAS PERDERAM TUDO E 55 JA FORAM DECLADAS MORTAS E AINDA HA DESAPARECIDOS!
É HORA DE NOS UNIRMOS COMO UM PAÍS QUE LUTA POR SEUS PRÓPRIOS MORADORES, SE O GOVERNO NÃO FAZ NADA, NÓS FAZEMOS!
MAIS INFORMAÇÕES NA DM
SOMOS LAS CANARINHAS NO TWITTER E INSTAGRAM, VOCÊ PODE DOAR NO EMAIL
Constructed from a used canoe, this armchair rejects modern forms of production, proposing instead a return to tradition. The armchair centers traditional Brazilian forms and woodcarving techniques. Stripped of any ornamentation or superfluidity, the design is centered around the beauty of the reclaimed pequi wood and the sublime simplicity of a traditional canoe form.
Noticeable tool marks allow the work of the craftsman to remain visible. With its focus on material and heritage forms, this piece perfectly encapsulates the designer’s artistic sensibility.
The canoa chair is a classic of Brazilian furniture design. What makes this piece special are the forms and proportions accentuated by Caldas. The piece is a Brazilian master’s deeply personal take on a seminal Brazilian form.
Recycled Pequi wood,
H:43.25 x W:29.50 x D:55.88 (H:110 x W:75 x D:142)
People shelter from the rain about 185 miles south of San José, in Puntarenas province. An ever-increasing flow of people arrives every day in the town of Paso Canoas, the main border crossing between Panama and Costa Rica, battered after crossing the Darién Gap jungle on their way to the US