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Meet the Miniaturist: Michael Reynolds — A Story of Art, Legacy, and Imagination

  • 6 hours ago
  • 5 min read

One of the things I love most about the miniature world is that behind every great collection — and every great maker — there is always a deeper story.


When I sat down with Michael Reynolds for my latest of Meet the Miniaturist, I knew there would be history, artistry, and amazing objects in small scale. What I did not expect was just how much this conversation would reveal about legacy, family, and the emotional power of miniatures.


Michael’s journey began early — at just fifteen years old — when he built his mother her first dollhouse. That single act sparked something much bigger.


“For about four years, she and I heavily got into miniatures and began collecting.”

But like many artists, his path wasn’t linear. He went on to build a career in theater as a costume designer, stepping away from miniatures entirely.

“I walked away from it — lock, stock, and barrel.”

And yet, miniatures have a way of calling people back. After retiring from theater, it was his mother — still deeply immersed in collecting — who nudged him to return.

“She said, why don’t you try your hand at going back into miniatures?”

What followed was not a slow re-entry — it was a leap.


From Theater to Tiny Worlds

Michael’s background in theater didn’t just influence his work — it shaped it completely.

“I worked with incredible set designers, prop designers… it all translated. Just on a tiny scale.”

That idea — translation — is key to understanding Michael’s work. His miniatures are not simply small objects; they are staged, composed, and designed with the same visual storytelling sensibility you would find on stage. There is also something deeper at play.

Michael shared that as a child, he had once dreamed of becoming an architect, but severe dyslexia made the technical path difficult.

“I wanted to be an architect… but I could never handle the engineering math. But for some reason, I completely understood scale.”

Miniatures became the bridge — a place where creativity could override limitation.


The Work: Beyond the Dollhouse

Many collectors will remember the impact of Michael’s work on the show circuit — I certainly do. I still recall walking past his table years ago and being completely stopped by what I saw.

One of his most iconic creations — a dramatic dragon bed — has since taken on a life of its own.

“People equate that as my signature piece.”

The piece even crossed into unexpected territory.

“I had a woman message me and ask if it came in king size.”

That moment says everything. His work doesn’t just live in the miniature world — it breaks out of it. Over time, Michael intentionally pushed in that direction.

“I evolved into fantasy pieces and standalone pieces… something somebody could put with other artwork.”

This is where his work becomes especially important in the broader conversation around fine art miniatures — not as accessories to a dollhouse, but as complete artistic statements.


A Collector’s Legacy: His Mother’s World

At the heart of Michael’s story is his mother — a collector whose impact reaches far beyond her own home. Her collection, now in Michael’s care, represents over fifty years of deeply informed, instinct-driven collecting.

“She always treated her miniatures as works of art.”

And she lived that belief.

Rather than confining pieces to traditional settings, she displayed them throughout her home — in curios, on pedestals, integrated into daily life.

“She never really built room boxes… she exhibited the pieces as works of art.”

Her eye was extraordinary, and her timing even more so. She supported artists early — often before they became widely recognized.

“If she found someone she liked, she made absolutely sure she bought from them.”

That approach resulted in a collection that includes foundational names in fine art miniatures — from early pioneers to masters of silver, furniture, and decorative arts.

But what moved me most was not the scope of the collection — it was the meaning behind it. Michael shared a deeply personal story about one piece he plans to keep intact:


“What I love most about collectors is the story behind them… there’s always a backstory that rarely gets discussed.”

In that single statement, he captured something essential about this entire world.

Making, Collecting, and Creating Together

This was not just a story of inheritance — it was a story of collaboration.

Michael and his mother inspired each other constantly.

In one moment that perfectly illustrates this, she purchased an altar and crucifix at auction.

His response?

“That inspired me to actually build the chapel.”

That is the magic of miniatures — one object becomes the seed for an entire world.

His mother was also a maker herself, creating elaborate working chandeliers and lighting fixtures.


“She loved diamonds and shiny things.”

Many were sold, but many more remained — not because they weren’t good, but because she chose to keep them.

“If it didn’t sell, she never put it out again — she just collected them.”

As a result, Michael now holds not just a collection — but a hidden archive of her work.



Creating Without Compromise

When I asked Michael about his process, his answer was as honest as it was revealing.

“If I make something specifically to sell, it’s not remotely as creatively inspired as something that comes off the top of my head.”

That philosophy explains everything about his work.

It’s why his pieces feel unexpected, imaginative, and deeply personal — from fantasy furniture to painted miniatures to entire conceptual environments. Even now, his ideas continue to evolve.

“I’ve become obsessed with owls… I want to make ones where you pull a pin and their head spins.”

That sense of curiosity — of following an idea simply because it fascinates him — is exactly what keeps his work alive.


What Comes Next

At the moment, Michael is focused on completing a novel he has been working on for eight years — a creative pursuit that feels entirely in line with everything else he does.

But he is also returning.

“I’ll be back.”

And for those of us who remember the impact of his work — or are just discovering it now — that is something to look forward to. He is reconnecting with the community, revisiting shows, and exploring what comes next creatively.


Why This Story Matters

What stayed with me most after this conversation is not just the artistry — it’s the reminder of what this world really is. It is not just about objects. It is about memory.It is about storytelling.It is about connection — across time, across generations, across creative lives.

And perhaps most of all, it is about imagination. As Michael said so perfectly:

“Miniatures are where dreams become real.”

And conversations like this remind me exactly why I believe that too.

 
 
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