Recycled Furniture by Yinka Ilori

You're bound to know someone who likes to rescue old furniture from alleyways and garbage bins. Whether or not said person gives those pieces new life depends on a fair measure of initiative, creativity, and resolve. I happen to know one such dumpster diver who actually does reinvent all kinds of things: wine racks turn into floating shelves, file cabinets become side tables, and slatted chairs evolve into planters. The same mixture of imagination and handiwork pervades the work of Yinka Ilori, a recycled furniture designer who recently exhibited at 100% Design.

Kekere Chair. Designed by Yinka Ilori.

Found Furniture Gets Exotic

Recycled Furniture by Yinka Ilori

Three of Ilori's pieces in particular may garner your attention: SymmetrySix, a side table with arachnidan quality; Kekere, a chair with unusual dimensions; and Two-become-1, a lounge with Gemini duality. All pieces are constructed using found furniture. SymmetrySix combines an old unwanted table and chair that have been disassembled and patched together to make a six-legged side table. Finished in turquoise gloss lacquer, SymmetrySix gets a bit of the old world thrown in (perhaps an allusion to the furniture's previous lives), with a decoration of found maps placed beneath a glass top.

Kekere Chair. Designed by Yinka Ilori.

For a hint of the exotic, Kekere offers a new perspective on an old chair. Cut down to create a low seat, Kekere is then upholstered in Nigerian cloth and painted a bright orange with glossy lacquer. The change in scale lends what was formerly an unwanted piece into something that deserves a second look. Two-become-1 has a name that explains the lounge chair's genesis. An amalgamation of two discarded chairs, the resulting piece by Ilori contrasts straight and curvy legs. Like the yin yang symbol, Two-become-1 maintains the individual characteristics of the separate parts while also offering a funky blend (the resulting chair calls to mind intertwined male and female bodies).

About the Designer: Yinka Ilori recently exhibited one-of-a-kind furniture pieces at the Southbank African Afro-Caribbean Design Diaspora and at 100% Design. A recycled furniture designer, Ilori also uses exotic textiles such as Ankara, African wax cloths.

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