Kelli Anderson takes us on a tour of her home studio featuring a custom standing desk and more.

I've noticed that the tools I use end up shaping all of my
work. As a defence, I try to beat this game by preemptively shaping my
tools, like my desk
(1). My desk is built to
accommodate my idiosyncratic work habits. It transforms (via a linear
actuator) into a standing desk for the working hours, but contracts down
into a solid shape (like a normal piece of furniture) when not in use.
In my one-room apartment/studio, this working and not-working
positioning differentiation serves an important psychological purpose.
Even though my desk is always in sight, it changes my relationship to
the object, which helps me to disengage from work when it's lowered.

The inside cabinets are filled with wide, shallow plexiglass
drawers. These facilitate my need to visually organise projects into
little piles. There's a built-in tool chest organised by utility, with
drawers for 'adhering things to other things', 'severing things', and
'measuring things'. I'm trying to make a space that prioritises my
actions, so there is as little psychic friction between me and getting
the work done as possible.
I wanted to designate an area on top of my desk for any
physical aids to memory. This gridded pegboard, that was originally used
for drying spools of thread
(2), houses material scraps of inspiration including business cards, print samples and plexiglass shards.
Looming overhead is a solar-system-esque mobile
(3). I made it myself by gorilla-glueing wooden spheres to carbon fiber rods. The large poster
(4) by Josef Müller-Brockmann serves to always remind me that simpler is often better.

There's usually at least one cat lurking in front of or behind my computer monitor
(5), typically about to waylay some unfortunate insect near the window.