“I’m definitely addicted to big,” Dan Reeves confesses. I’ve seen the fruits of his penchant first-hand. I met Dan in 2017 when I discovered The Journey Project, an amazing large-scale sculpture that made appearances around San Diego and beyond before ending up at Burning Man.

Dan’s newest venture is Mid Century, a boutique in Hillcrest specializing in vintage modern and Danish contemporary furniture, décor, and lighting.

The music in Mid Century makes me smile – it’s reminiscent of “The Jetsons.” When I mention it, Dan prompts me:

“Imagine a housewife walking around with a martini and vacuuming, or being inside the lamp from ‘I Dream of Jeannie.’”

Fellow JustifiedHype Creator Rebecca Nuvoletta suggested this music to Dan – “Rebecca is good that way,” Dan declares – it’s Les Baxter & His Orchestra, and it’s perfect for this space: smooth and loungey, serene and sleek.

The very name of the design style – Mid Century – conveys an art form exemplifying juxtaposition and being in-between. Organic shapes, but with sharp lines; futuristic, but riffing off the past.

Dan didn’t know anything about mid century modern design when he and his friend Blake acquired the store. Blake was the expert.

“I spent a lot of time on the internet,” Dan admits. But he’s a quick study.

I’m startled to hear that some of the merchandise in the store is not actually vintage. Mid Century even produces a popular reproduction they call the “Z-Chair,” based upon an original design by Poul Jenson for Selig, a Danish manufacturer. The Z-Chair features solid walnut, custom upholstery, and an airy construction that makes for a “low, swept back, loungey sit.” Dan explains what’s important to most of his customers is not a designer name, but the look and the feel.

“There’s history – people –

behind all these pieces.

It’s almost our duty

to pass that feeling on.”

Mid Century also re-wires old lamps. “Some of the things we pull out of these lamps, you wouldn’t believe,” Dan says ominously.

How did he end up here? After earning a degree in Sculpture at SDSU, much of his work has involved what he calls the “Fire Arts” – works in glass, metal, and clay.

“The transmutation of materials through fire is definitely the core of what I like to do,” he says. “I’d light anything on fire just to see what happens.”

When Dan recalls his first Burning Man in 2010, he gets goosebumps.

“There’s no other canvas like it,” he says. “The scale can be anything. It’s the world’s biggest blank canvas.”

Mid Century, Dan reeves

Dan actually sees finished sculptures in his mind before taking any steps to bring them into the material realm. But his experience in manifesting The Journey taught him that collaboration and compromise make his concepts more powerful.

“I originally kept a tight hold on the structure, but then kept reaching out for ideas. It ultimately became a much more engrossing project,” he says.

The Journey Project was an eight-foot high, walkable wooden sculpture lined with sound-responsive LEDs, based on the shape the double helix.

So, what’s next? When Dan talks about his art, he is instantly animated with low-key, but palpable, excitement.

“A permutation of The Journey, but up!” he reveals. He describes an accessible structure shaped like an “upright conch shell,” made of interlaid pyramids, five stories up to a crowning perch.

The kicker in Dan’s new project: burnable lights. Huh?

“No hardware and as much burnable wood as possible. I want to burn it and use a minimal amount of actual electronics.” To my befuddled expression, he adds: “I know. I’m letting my defocalized brain work on it.”