camilo huinca carves personal histories into sculptural wooden chairs
camilo huinca turns personal memories into sculptural chairs
Chilean artist and designer Camilo Huinca, also known as ONLYJOKE, extends his visual language beyond illustration with a collection of sculptural wooden chairs. The series draws from literary figures including Rainer Maria Rilke, Franz Kafka, and Chilean poet Gonzalo Millán, translating memories of childhood, labor, family, and rural life into carved timber chairs that double as storytelling devices.
Huinca treats each chair as a narrative structure. Faces emerge from backrests, figures inhabit seats and tabletops, and painted carvings act as emotional traces embedded within the wood. The collection transforms everyday furniture into a series of autobiographical portraits, where personal experiences and literary influences become inseparable from the objects themselves.

Rider on a Broken Horse chair. Wood and paint. July 2025 | image by @plataforma_visual via @onlyjoke
shaped by poetry and personal mythology
Several pieces in Camilo Huinca’s furniture collection explore formative experiences through symbolic forms. Palma Sucia references a line from Gonzalo Millán’s poetry and reflects on the dignity of manual labor, using carved and painted surfaces to evoke worn skin, dried paint, cuts, and the physical marks left behind by work. The fragmented face and weathered body of the chair suggest a portrait shaped by lived experience rather than idealized representation.
Monólogo al origen draws inspiration from Rilke’s observation that childhood is humanity’s true homeland. Four carved faces support the structure of the chair, representing the emotional foundations of early life. Three smile while one appears sad, acknowledging childhood as a source of both joy and enduring wounds. Above them, a solitary figure occupies the seat, symbolizing adulthood resting upon a complex landscape of memories.
Confluencia, another of the Chilean artist’s designs, turns toward place and belonging. Inspired by summers spent in rural Chillán, the work incorporates references to local landscapes alongside fragments of personal photographs embedded within the chair. The object becomes both furniture and archive, preserving moments that might otherwise remain intangible.

Rider on a Broken Horse chair. Wood and paint. July 2025 | image by @plataforma_visual via @onlyjoke
furniture as a medium for reflection
Throughout the collection, Huinca uses timber as a carrier of memory. The carving marks, uneven contours, and hand-painted details keep the making process visible, giving each piece the character of a personal artifact.
Other works confront themes of adulthood and resilience. Describir un Viaje explores acceptance and emotional growth through symbolic figures that represent nature, family, absence, and continuity. El Diablo, informed by Kafka’s writings, addresses suffering and endurance through a composition that includes a burning figure, a red head, and a black horse standing as an emblem of persistence amid adversity.
Across the collection, Huinca treats furniture as a way of preserving experiences. Memories of childhood, rural landscapes, work, and loss are embedded into the chairs through carving, painting, and symbolic forms.

Palma Sucia, Wood and Paint, Santiago, Chile — July 2025 | image by @plataforma_visual via @onlyjoke

Palma Sucia, Wood and Paint, Santiago, Chile — July 2025 | image by @plataforma_visual via @onlyjoke

Palma Sucia, Wood and Paint, Santiago, Chile — July 2025 | image by @plataforma_visual via @onlyjoke

Monologue to the Origin | image by @plataforma_visual via @onlyjoke

drawing on Rainer Maria Rilke’s reflections on childhood | image by @josemoragaphoto via @onlyjoke

carved faces and painted details appear throughout Huinca’s chairs | image by @plataforma_visual via @onlyjoke

Describir un Viaje | image via @onlyjoke

carved figures, painted symbols, and personal references across a blackened timber structure | image via @onlyjoke

Confluencia | image by @plataforma_visual via @onlyjoke

incorporating memories of summers spent in rural Chillán | image by @josemoragaphoto via @onlyjoke

carved motifs, exposed hardware, and layered materials | image by @plataforma_visual via @onlyjoke

Partes Rotas, Furniture Exercises, 2026 | image by @josemoragaphoto via @onlyjoke

an apple-shaped sculpture sits atop a bench | image via @onlyjoke

extending huinca’s recurring visual vocabulary into functional objects | image via @onlyjoke
project info:
designer: Camilo Huinca / ONLYJOKE | @onlyjoke
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