Sawkille Co. + Jonah Meyer | Is This Real?

27 Feb - 24 May 2026
Maya Frodeman Gallery West is pleased to present Is This Real?, an exhibition of furniture and art by Sawkille Co. and Jonah Meyer, on view at the gallery's location at 3465 N Pines Way in Wilson, WY from February 27th through May 24th, 2026. An artist reception will be held at MFG West on Friday, February 27th from 5 to 7pm. Meyer and members of the Sawkille team will be present. All are welcome to attend.
 

Sawkille Co. is recognized for its designs and its quality of craftsmanship. Sawkille Co. was founded by Jonah Meyer and Tara De Lisio with the intention, simply put, to participate in this good world in a good way, and to create products and a work environment that reflect the value of human effort and creative vision. At their workshop and headquarters in Kingston, New York, all pieces are handcrafted using sustainably forested material and the production shop is a no-waste facility. All the wood utilized in their production comes from the surrounding forests, and pieces are often finished and hand rubbed using beeswax or Danish oil. A local potter is provided leftover sawdust to fuel his firings, and unused stumps of waste trees are upcycled into the modern yet understated furnishings Sawkille has become so known for. Some of Sawkille’s signature finishes include ebonized walnut, bleached maple, blackened steel, indigo dye and playful inlays of brass or abalone shell.

 

Meyer is the owner, designer and artist behind Sawkille Co., and has a background in fine art painting and sculpture, as well as woodworking. His identity as an artist was formed in the fields of Pennsylvania, where creativity and artistry met face on with the practicalities of homesteading in the seventies. Meyer sensed early on that being an artist was his true path, and was encouraged by his parents, a potter and a goldsmith who were pursuing their dreams of homesteading and respective crafts. Meyer graduated from the Rhode Island School of Design and moved to the Hudson Valley, where he generated his own version of sustaining life through art. Meyer sold his first chair design to one of his art school professors, which fueled further exploration of chairs, first with twigs and roots and heavily organic shapes. Twenty years later, the crisp vocabulary of Sawkille Co. has emerged en force.