SOFA aka Sculptural Objects Functional Art and Design turned 23 this year. But that’s not all that Chicago celebrated on SOFA’s opening day. During the pre-opening media viewing, Navy Pier’s Festival Hall buzzed with electricians installing lights atop beeping hydraulic lifts and gallerists arranging their displays, and hummed with unabashed glee—it was the morning after the Cubs triumph.

SOFA 2016
Some key SOFA 2016 stats before moving on to particulars: 70 galleries from a dozen countries representing 800 artists; and 30 lectures. SOFA Special Exhibits included: of Ball State University School of Art; Chicago High School for the Arts (ChiArts); Collectors of Wood Art; Glass Art Society; CONNECT, a student design competition with installations from six universities (Purdue University was awarded first place); a live-in installation by Design Industries Foundation Fighting AIDS (DIFFA) Chicago with AIDS survivor and ambassador Jim Petrakis; and the Hot Glass Roadshow from the Corning Glass Museum, a semi-trailer equipped to make glass.

Brent Cole, Ball State University exhibit

Kirra Galleries, Australia
It’s conventional among some art world inhabitants to look down on SOFA as beneath their interest—or as less worthy than art fairs that exclude work with associations to the descriptors craft, design, and decorative arts. For audiences who are interested in what artists and craftspeople create in materials such as glass, metal, wood, plastic, and fiber, SOFA 2016 didn’t disappoint.

Harry Roa Studio
That’s to say, SOFA isn’t simply for moneyed buyers of eye candy. Its scale makes room for works that are mind candy, feats of eye-hand coordination, and from time to time the results of pure luck. Here’s a selection of SOFA 2016 sights that invited me to look—and look again.

Marzena Krzemiska, work in glass, Ball State University exhibit

Tom Eckert, Obscured (work in wood), Adam Blaue Gallery

Humaira Abid, Proposal, detail. Abmeyer Wood Fine Art

Derek Bencomo, Grace and Motion (carved teakwood root), Kirsten Muenster Projects

Why Wood? installation view. Collectors of Wood Art exhibit

Tanya Aguiniga, Mend, detail. Volume Gallery

Caroline Bartlett, Full Circle, detail. browngrotta arts

Lucy Slivinsky, Double Vision. Jeffrey Breslow Gallery

Kiel Arto Design (coffee tables from retired cars), Latvia

ChiArts alumni exhibit

ChiArts alumni exhibit

Miguel Ontiveros, Still Life of Attic, detail. ChiArts alumni exhibit.

Hona Hideaki, Knot A. Tai Modern

Isohi Setsuko, Hamakaze (Sea Breeze). Tai Modern

Dona Look, #15-2. browngrotta arts

Urban Nature: A Recycled Sanctuary, detail of installation, Purdue University. CONNECT winner

Steffen Dam, Flowerblock, Heller Gallery

Karen Bexfield, Enigma 3 (glass), Winterowd Fine Art

Michael Enn Sirvet, detail (powder coated aluminum), Christopher Martin Gallery

John Kiley, Fractographst, Adam Blaue Gallery

The Fractographst’s tools, Adam Blaue Gallery booth
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