
Tom Sachs- On Vessels, Value, and the Expanded Field.
20 October 2025 • Mark Westall
When we spoke, Tom was in a taxi on his way to Heathrow, heading back to New York after the opening of his exhibition A Good Shelf at Thaddaeus Ropac
TOM SACHS is a sculptor, probably best known for his elaborate recreations of various Modern icons, all of them masterpieces of engineering and design of one kind or another. In an early show he made Knoll office furniture out of phone books and duct tape; later, he recreated Le Corbusier’s 1952 Unité d’Habitation using only foamcore and a glue gun. Other projects have included his versions of various Cold War masterpieces, like the Apollo 11 Lunar Excursion Module, and the bridge of the battleship USS Enterprise. And because no engineering project is more complex and pervasive than the corporate ecosystem, he’s done versions of those, too, including a McDonald’s he built using plywood, glue, assorted kitchen appliances. He’s also done Hello Kitty and her friends in materials ranging from foamcore to bronze.
A lot has been made of the conceptual underpinnings of these sculptures: how Sachs’ sampling capitalist culture, remixing, dubbing and spitting it back out again, so that the results are transformed and transforming. Equally, if not more important, is his total embrace of “showing his work.” All the steps that led up to the end result are always on display. On a practical level, this means that all seams, joints, screws or for that matter anything holding stuff together, like foamcore and plywood, are left exposed. Nothing is erased, sanded away, or rendered invisible. On a more philosophical level, this means that nothing Sachs makes is ever finished. Like any good engineering project, everything can always be stripped down, stripped out, redesigned and improved.
The reward for work is more work.

20 October 2025 • Mark Westall
When we spoke, Tom was in a taxi on his way to Heathrow, heading back to New York after the opening of his exhibition A Good Shelf at Thaddaeus Ropac

29 September 2025 • Mark Westall
Exhibition of Tom Sachs’s bricolage chawan sculptures, and the premiere of Mezcaleria, an art installation and working coffee and mezcal bar.

9 December 2020 • Paul Carey-Kent
Already it seems somewhat normal that Art Basel Miami and its numerous satellites were held online this year. That doesn’t mean the sun and parties and in-person experiences of art aren’t missed, but they’re not easy to get to anyway… Here are four works which interested me among the 2600 works ‘shown’:

30 January 2018 • Mark Westall
Vito Schnabel Gallery is to present 1 + 1 = 1 Million, an exhibition organised by artist Tom Sachs to spotlight significant works by American Conceptual titan Sol LeWitt (1928 – 2007)

15 August 2017 • Staff
Recently contemporary artist Tom Sachs teamed up with Nike to present an artisanal capsule collection, NIKECraft.

28 January 2015 • Mark Westall
Conceived and directed by Aaron Rose and Petra Collins, featuring a roll call of NY and LA creative catalysts including Tom Sachs, Jeffrey Deitch, Andre Saraiva, Ana Kras, Aaron Young and Glenn O’Brien

23 December 2013 • Mark Westall
Piston Head – Artists Engage the Automobile

15 April 2013 • Mark Westall
With 24 solo presentations and 300 artworks spread throughout 15,000 square feet of raw space, as well as an immersive… Read More
8 October 2012 • Mark Westall
Jean ARP, Saint CLAIR CEMIN, Lucio FONTANA, Tom SACHS, Not VITAL, Ai WEIWEI, Agostino BONALUMI, Piero MANZONI, Enrico CASTELLANI, Robert BARRY, Giulio PAOLINI and others.
16 July 2012 • Mark Westall
This exhibition seeks to ask, “what is a crime?” The exhibition title, derived from an obsolete law still on the books in Los Angeles, points to the definitions of criminal behavior as sometimes absurd, other times poetic, and occasionally magical.

7 December 2010 • Mark Westall
The third Art Barter event which will open to the public on 9th Dec and run until 12th Dec 2010… Read More