Wonders in Wood
February 21, 2018
One honors traditional, the other redefines industrial, but both these Connecticut furniture makers craft exquisite pieces for the home.
Text by Lisa H. Speidel
Get Back Inc. owner Tim Byrne has a fitting nickname: âThe Eye,â a moniker he earned for his ability to see the beautyâand utilityâof industrial objects destined for the dump. An early adapter of the vintage-industrial aesthetic, Byrne started his company back in 2000, foraging for castaways in factories and workshops. In his capable (and creative) hands, a wooden gear pattern converts to a chandelier, a âPortelvatorâ machinistâs cart morphs into a bar cart, and a 1920s cast-iron crank engine hoist paired with a woven rattan Nanna Ditzel hanging egg chair becomes the chicest seat in town.
Byrneâs shop, whose name is rooted in the philosophy of âgetting back the spirit and romance of an earlier age,â produces two tiers of work: one-of-a-kinds and originals. The latter can be crafted in multiples and customized. Take, for example, the swing-out seat, a wall-mounted stool modeled after an early-twentieth-century English cafeteria stool, or the Gramercy Lamp, one of which appears in every room in the Julian Schnabelâdesigned Gramercy Park Hotel. The mission of Get Back Inc. runs deep, says the companyâs content manager, Aaron Fagan. âItâs not just an aesthetic, itâs also about preserving history and our cultural heritage.â Oakville, CT, getbackinc.com
Iâm sixty-four years old,â says Peter Van Beckum. âI came to this a long time ago.â In fact, it was back in the late seventies, when he was part of the team rehabbing the nineteenth-century Fess Hotel in Wisconsin that he got his start. âThey needed interior doors built, and I said, âI can do that.â I had no experience, but they came out gorgeous,â he remembers. Years later, Van Beckum found his way to the North Bennet Street School in Boston, where he was classically trained. Today, he designs and makes exquisite commissioned piecesâtables, chairs, cupboards, headboardsâmany of which are reproductions or adaptations of eighteenth-century furniture.
Thereâs the stunning thirty-foot-long table he built for the Old State House in Hartford, for instance, the elegant breakfront cupboard he designed for a gentleman that was inspired by a piece he fell in love with during his motherâs time working in a library, and the very careful reproduction of a serpentine BombĂŠ chest of drawers from the RISD Museum collection. The RISD catalog describes the original as âa great feat of woodworking skills.â The same can be said of Van Beckumâs meticulous versionâin fact, it can be said of all of his creations. Farmington, CT, petervanbeckum.com
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