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The artist Joel Hernandez, 39, first worked with papier-mâché as an 8-year-old, soon after moving from Mexico to rural Indiana. His parents had gone looking for piñatas — a staple of their family celebrations — at local stores but had come up short. Hernandez, now based in San Francisco, is just one of the contemporary craftspeople using papier-mâché in new and provocative ways. And while each has a different approach to the medium, they share an appreciation for its democratic and economic nature. Making papier-mâché, after all, requires nothing more than a few pantry items, some trash and a bit of imagination.
Persons: Joel Hernandez, , Hernandez, La Luz de Jesus, Han, it’s, Bernie Kaminski, Brooks, , ” Kaminski, who’s, he’s Organizations: La Luz, Mardi Gras, New Locations: Mexico, Indiana, , La Luz de, Los Angeles, San Francisco, China, New Orleans, New York City
The Brooklyn-based ceramic artist Eun-Ha Paek’s pieces are defined by their renegade spirit. Living everywhere from New York to California, they make experimental sculptures that reflect the traditions and aesthetics of both cultures. In Korean, for example, instead of saying, ‘The soup is boiling,’ you would say the sound the soup makes when it boils. That extraness and whimsy is what I’m hoping to express.”That’s also true for the Manhattan-based ceramic artist Janny Baek, 50, who was born in Seoul and moved to Flushing, Queens, when she was 3. I felt like I needed to do something more than be an artist,” Baek says.
Persons: , Paek, Design —, , ” Paek, Jay Oh, ” That’s, Janny Baek, ” Baek, McMahon, Baek, Raina Lee Organizations: Rhode Island School, Design, Greenwich House, Parsons School, Korea Society, Harvard Locations: Brooklyn, New York, Seoul, Los Angeles, California, Korea, Manhattan, America, Flushing , Queens, United States
Alongside cheese and charcuterie, he almost always includes a platter of figs interspersed with dozens of loose Marlboro Golds. The Charlotte, N.C.-based artist grew up among the tobacco farms of Williamston, where their grandmother worked in the fields. “Seeing my grandmother die and not being compensated in any way showed me how disposable people are to Big Tobacco. “I think my generation can relate more to addiction to the phone than addiction to tobacco,” they say. To me, cigarettes represent how we treat both things and people now.”Set design by Yolande Gagnier.
Persons: Daniel E, Soares, , Alma Berrow, ” Nicholson, Yolande Gagnier, Christopher T, Linn, Brendan Galvin Organizations: Marlboro, Tobacco Locations: York, British, Charlotte, N.C, Williamston
BREAKING VASES IS an occupational hazard for florists, but for Wagner Kreusch it’s also a source of inspiration. The Brazilian-born, London-based botanical artist collects ceramics from makers around the world and when one of them accidentally slips through his fingers, he saves the fragments, reconfiguring the shards on the floor of his studio to look like the vessel has just toppled over, and arranges flowers (he prefers wild flora such as amaranth and mimosa) amid the chaos. Most recently, Kreusch, a certified ikebana instructor, transplanted a cluster of foraged roadside marigolds, root systems intact, and placed them amid a half-smashed terra-cotta garden pot he found at a market in Porto, Portugal. “They looked like they broke the vase to free themselves,” he says of the unruly cluster of yellow blooms. The gravitational pull is both literal and metaphorical; by building on the floor, they’re at once returning flowers to the earth (if only symbolically) and repositioning a flower arrangement’s hierarchy in a given room — these are designs that demand space, that shift the balance of focus from the mantel or dining room table, that make life a little inconvenient for the occupants.
Persons: Wagner Kreusch it’s, , , you’re Locations: Brazilian, London, Porto, Portugal, they’re
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