Sam Maloof – 2011 Artist of the Year

Sam Maloof
Sam Maloof began designing and hand making custom furniture in the 1950's. He became recognized for his outstanding and unique designs and superb workmanship, creating fine pieces that are treasured and passed down through generations.
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Sam Maloof, 1916 to 2009, began designing and hand making custom furniture in the 1950’s. He became recognized for his outstanding and unique designs and superb workmanship, creating fine pieces that are treasured and passed down through generations.

Sam Maloof is America’s most renowned contemporary furniture craftsman. No other twentieth-century woodworker has received such attention in the media, nor garnered as many awards. Topping this list, in 1985 Maloof was the recipient of a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation fellowship—the coveted “Genius Grant” typically awarded to scientists, scholars, and authors. He was the first American craftsman to have been so privileged. Following up on this celebrity, in January 1986 a feature writer from People magazine visited his Southern California workshop and enthusiastically declared the furniture designer/craftsman to be the “Hemingway of hardwood.” – From the Introduction of The Furniture of Sam Maloof by Jeremy Adamson

Sam Maloof - Chair

Sam rose to prominence in the postwar era of minimalist architecture. For more than half a century, Sam was a force in the nucleus of artisans creating custom and strictly limited production pieces in the heralded studio furniture movement.

His work is appreciated by private collectors, and many widely respected institutions, The Smithsonian, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Boston Museum of Fine Arts and The White House Craft Collection are among elite institutions where the general public now experiences classic Maloof designs and workmanship firsthand.

Sam’s marriage to Alfreda Maloof lasted until her death 50 years later, in 1998. A testament to their love, the non-profit Sam and Alfreda Maloof Foundation for the Arts and Crafts is charged with the mission of encouraging artist to excel in craftsmanship. The foundation is housed at the sprawling landmark family residence. Lovingly expanded over four decades, The National Register of Historic Places registered home is open to the public.

In 2001, Sam married collector, Beverly Wingate. The new Mrs. Maloof took on developing the six-acre garden to harmoniously frame the Maloof compound with California natives and Mediterranean climate compatible plantings. Dedicated in 2004, Beverly’s Garden invites, delights, and celebrates nature.

Fans of Maloof furniture include former President Jimmy Carter, who called Sam his “woodworking hero.” Ray Charles, the blind singer, was another fan. He ran his hand over a Maloof chair and observed he could “feel its soul.” Along with many awards and accolades, Sam received honorary doctorates from the Rhode Island School of Design, Aurora University in Illinois and the California State University of San Bernardino. 

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