Silas Kopf

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 Marquetry tangram table by Silas Kopf at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts with trompe l'oeil images of paper and pencil made entirely of different shades of flat veneer.
Marquetry tangram table by Silas Kopf at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts with trompe l'oeil images of paper and pencil made entirely of different shades of flat veneer.

Silas Kopf is a furniture maker specializing in the art of marquetry. Born in 1949, Kopf graduated from Princeton University in 1972 with a degree in architecture and soon began designing and making furniture. In 1988, he received a Craftsman's Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts,[1] and used the opportunity to study traditional marquetry technique at the École Boulle, an institute of interior architecture and design, in Paris. His major projects include several pianos commissioned by Steinway & Sons[2] and benches, desks, and cabinets for private collections and museums. His designs frequently incorporate floral depictions, other images from nature, and trompe l'oeil concepts. He first became interested in marquetry because he hoped for an alternative, less consumerist lifestyle.[3]

Since 1978, he has worked in Easthampton, Massachusetts, where he continues to build and design. He has an assistant, Tom Coughlin, who also designs and builds guitars.

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