Los Angeles Times

‘Paperworks’ says it all

Craft & Folk Art Museum’s exhibit reveals paper’s creative malleabili­ty

- By Deborah Vankin Photograph­s by Ricardo DeAratanha Los Angeles Times deborah.vankin@latimes.com

The jungle is a magical one, dense with dangling vines and voluminous blossoms awash in green and gold glitter. The foliage sways in the breeze, casting glimmering shadows that dance on a nearby wall to the chorus of crickets chirping, leaves rustling and crows cawing.

Chris Natrop’s hand-cut paper forest at the Craft & Folk Art Museum is part of the exhibition “Paperworks,” which features sculptures, collages and largescale installati­ons by 15 contempora­ry artists working in unusual ways with paper.

Using a somewhat crude boxcutting knife, Natrop carved a 3-D forest that is backed by video from his own garden. The color-washed paper forms, often with rough or frayed edges, dangle from the ceiling and drape along the floor like an overgrown yard, the organic sounds from his garden bringing the installati­on to life.

“The show is wildly diverse in terms of how the artists are approachin­g paper, the techniques that they’re using,” said Howard N. Fox, the guest curator behind the exhibition and curator emeritus of contempora­ry art at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. “We’ve got at least four or five nationalit­ies by birth represente­d in the show, artists of different sexual orientatio­ns, all different cultural traditions. The one through-line is the interest in paper as a primary medium.”

“Paperworks,” on view through Jan. 3, is one of two shows marking the museum’s 50th anniversar­y. It was founded in 1965 by artists Edith R. Wyle (actor Noah Wyle’s grandmothe­r) and Bette Chase as a commercial gallery and cafe called the Egg & the Eye, showcasing contempora­ry crafts and ethnic folk art.

“You’d have to pass through the Sam Maloofs and Beatrice Woods to get to the restaurant,” museum Executive Director Suzanne Isken said of the gallery, which transition­ed into the private, nonprofit Craft & Folk Art Museum in 1973. “Edith was passionate about, and just wanted to share, the really interestin­g things people were doing with a craft focus. And that’s exactly what we’re doing today.”

“Paperworks” is a particular­ly appropriat­e show to mark the anniversar­y, Isken said. The exhibition highlights — albeit through a particular­ly modern and experiment­al lens — one of the most elemental materials in craft work.

“Paper has a tremendous history as a material,” Isken said. “But what we’re trying to do at CAFAM is take a traditiona­l craft material and show how people are using it in more contempora­ry and innovative ways. Here it’s about the manipulati­on of paper — cutting it, ripping it, squeezing it, tearing it, folding it, crumpling it. That sense of exploding the boundaries has been really interestin­g to us.”

Tm Gratkowski’s work in the show is seemingly explosive: His mold-cast concrete boxes erupt with glossy, crumpled paper. The bundle of scrunched, recycled magazine pages have an almost floral quality to them, as if they were petals arranged in a concrete cube. At the same time, they could be volatile, fire-filled scientific experiment­s gone awry.

Tam Van Tran’s aggressive, wall-mounted sculptures — tinted with homemade paints made from spirulina and beet juice — appear almost reptilian. It’s as if the preserved backside or exterior shell of some prehistori­c creature were busting through the museum’s walls. To enhance texture, Van Tran uses quotidian office supplies on paperboard. One “animal form” is covered in three-hole-punch cutouts and shiny, metallic staples that appear to be a glistening fur.

Perhaps the most painstakin­gly laborious works in the show are the deconstruc­ted books of Susan Sironi. One three-piece display includes a clear plexiglass box filled with what appears to be cream-colored sand. But on closer inspection, the box is filled with the loose, individual letters from a vintage book, each character handcut from its pages. An adjacent plexiglass box is filled with orange and yellow-tinted swirls, slices of illustrati­ons that also were cut from the book; layered flat inside the box, it appears to be sand art when seen from the side. Sironi left the skeleton of the book largely hollowed out but for outlines of the illustrati­on cutouts, which are tangled up inside its frame like knotted cassette tape or overgrown weeds.

The artist Phranc — who for years boasted the title “the world’s only singing, lesbian, Tupperware­lady performanc­e artist” — created realistic-looking, seashoreth­emed clothing items from corrugated cardboard and paper. She followed actual sewing patterns when assembling her handmade fabric to create an orange life vest, polka dot swimming shorts and beach umbrella with a 1950s vintage sewing machine.

A few two-dimensiona­l works are in the show, more aligned with collages, weavings or drawings, but even they show the manipulati­on of paper in unusual ways. Lecia Dole-Recio’s abstract works appear to be collages, but they’re more akin to assembled mosaics — each geometric “tile,” in stained-glass jewel tones, applied individual­ly to the panel.

Francesca Gabbiani’s detailed collages are so layered, they appear almost three-dimensiona­l. Each features structures — a shed or a cabin — in nature, but with an undercurre­nt of imminent destructio­n.

Minoru Ohira gauges textured swirls into painted, five-ply Japanese paper with a razor blade; Lorenzo Hurtado Segovia weaves together thin strips of painted paper to create colorful, almost pixelated “rugs” that blur the distinctio­n between fabric art and basketry.

Collective­ly, the works in the exhibition celebrate not only 50 years of craft on view at the museum, but the resilience and versatilit­y of paper itself.

“We think of paper as sort of obsolescen­t now — the ideal of the green office, the paperless office,” curator Fox said. “But it’s being rediscover­ed, almost, as a wonderfull­y, infinitely manipulabl­e material. And that’s the beauty of this show.”

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 ??  ?? sculptures, collages and large-scale installati­ons by 15 contempora­ry artists working with paper in unusual ways. Clockwise from top’s overview photo, “In Our Image” by Susan Sironi, “Papel tejido” by Lorenzo Hurtado Segovia and “Red Whirl” and “White...
sculptures, collages and large-scale installati­ons by 15 contempora­ry artists working with paper in unusual ways. Clockwise from top’s overview photo, “In Our Image” by Susan Sironi, “Papel tejido” by Lorenzo Hurtado Segovia and “Red Whirl” and “White...
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THE NEW EXHIBITION FEATURES
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 ??  ?? TAM VAN TRAN created the almost reptilian “Conceptual Formation,” wall-mounted and tinted with homemade paints.
TAM VAN TRAN created the almost reptilian “Conceptual Formation,” wall-mounted and tinted with homemade paints.

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