Bambi lives
A new woodsy trend for the home: Ceramic antlers & fake animal heads
This Jeff Miller superordinate antler chandelier features 24 faux antlers.
Cardboard deer heads from Cardboard Safari
A faux papier maché rhino, Anthropologie
Much cuter than the real thing.
How would feel if your Aunt Ruby were mounted on a wall?
There's a new twist in the morbid decor of taxidermy art — faking it. When it comes to furnishing your home, you can have that woodsy look without robbing an animal of its horns or hide.
While I was meandering around the River Oaks shopping district, an antler chandelier caught my eye at Design WIthin Reach. The dangling ceramic creation comes from Brooklyn-based designer Jason Miller’s “nature made better” collection.
Miller, recognized as a leading contemporary designer, is best known for his Superordinate antler lamps and chandliers, which retail between $270 and $8,000. He originally created the antlers for a 2003 exhibition called "Urban Apple Pie."
"The curators wanted people to create a design that spoke to the confluence of urban and rural design," Miller told Culturemap in a phone interview.
Miller says his goal with the antlers is to take a very traditional design and strip off the naturalness to achieve an urban-friendly design. While he's all for animal rights, the designer says he didn't mean to convey a social statement with his fake antlers.
Between 1995 and 2001, Miller worked as a studio assistant to Jeff Koons, the famous kitschy artist who brought his Puppy to life with flowers stuck on steel. While Miller says he wasn't directly inspired by Koons, the artist's figurative structures appealed to him.
"Jeff spends a lot of time with figurative structures, and a lot of times that deals with human bodies," Miller said. "That's something I've always been attracted to, but they're not a direct reference."
Don’t have the dough for these ceramic curiosities? No worries.
Cheaper alternatives to this animal-friendly trend include cardboard animal heads ($28-58) made from recycled cardboard, at UncommonGoods.
Anthropologie also offers faux trophy heads ($68), made from recycled book pages via papier-mâché.
Save your bullets for the real predators and seek out these alternative looks — because you don’t want to end up on this list.





