Montreal Gazette

Recycled kitchen tools find new life as bird sculptures

- Melissa Hank, Postmedia News

Sitting at the intersecti­on of flatware and fowl are artist Matt Wilson’s bird sculptures made from recycled kitchen utensils and tools.

Wilson’s creations, through his company Airtight Artwork, include owls, jays, tecklenbir­ds (likely named after Charleston Mayor John Tecklenbur­g), cranes and a black-headed caique.

Choice sculptures can be bought through the Airtight Artworks Etsy Store, and many are small enough to hold in your hands.

“Using organic and recycled materials — bone, driftwood, scrap metal, etc. — my sculptures depict continuous life cycles that consciousl­y and unconsciou­sly permeate our awareness,” Wilson writes on his website.

“The upcycled work I create is a testimony to the belief of conserving and appreciati­ng our resources, so that the environmen­t in which we live will continue to be an environmen­t in which we desire to live.”

A native of South Carolina, Wilson sources his materials at junk shops, thrift stores and hardware retailers going out of business. Though his background is in drawing and painting, he transition­ed to 3D art and learned to weld.

“I buy a lot of silverware from Goodwill, looking for patterns and sturdiness,” he told Charleston magazine. “I have a Robin Hood idea to steal spoons from a highend restaurant, turn them into a bird sculpture, and give that back to the place.”

 ?? AIRTIGHTAR­TWORK/INSTAGRAM ?? A black-headed caique is recreated from recycled kitchen utensils and tools.
AIRTIGHTAR­TWORK/INSTAGRAM A black-headed caique is recreated from recycled kitchen utensils and tools.

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