Scottish Field

GOOD ON PAPER

Using everything from old books to teabag paper, Isabell Buenz is taking origami to a whole new level

- WORDS MORAG BOOTLAND IMAGE ANGUS BLACKBURN

Isabell Buenz creates fabulous art and fashion from paper

Creating art and fashion from paper was almost a fait accompli for German artist Isabell Buenz, who swapped her homeland for Edinburgh seventeen years ago.

‘My Dad worked for a local newspaper, so we always had lots of leftover paper from the big roll,’ tells Isabell. ‘I started making things with it and it all developed from there. I studied traditiona­l bookbindin­g as I was always interested in that and it gave me the confidence to work with old books.’

Isabell makes sculptures in a small studio near the capital and in a larger workshop in Gatehouse of Fleet from old books, which are transforme­d into anything from models of cash registers to hats and jewellery. ‘Most recently I’ve made four pieces for the literature-themed suites in The Place Hotel in Edinburgh,’ explains Isabell. ‘I made a little chest from a copy of Treasure Island for their Robert Louis Stevenson suite.’ She also sources teabag paper from the Borders, which she can stitch on a sewing machine to create wearable items. ‘In 2014 I created a mermaid’s wedding dress and then in 2015 I made a butterfly top,’ says Isabell.

Training as an accountant and in expressive art and movement, a form of self-developmen­t, became Isabell’s chosen career paths in Germany before she took up art full-time, but it was a hankering for high heels that kickstarte­d her journey into the art of paper.

‘I was invited to an exhibition that had no specific subject so I decided that I wanted to make some paper stilettos,’ says Isabell. ‘I’m very tall, 6ft, and so is my partner, so I never really wear high heels, but ideally I would. Very high heels with thick platform soles. I do love shoes but as I don’t think I’d get away with it, this is how I indulge my passion.’ Isabell has created quite a collection of paper shoes in all shapes and sizes, from tiny to bigger than herself and has sold out a show in the German Shoe Museum.

As a medium, Isabell enjoys making art from something that is normally disposable. ‘Paper is not usually seen as something of value,’ she says. ‘But I can create something really precious from it. I love the fact that it is very flimsy, but I can make it into something sturdy and lasting, something that can be touched and held.’

In 2016, Isabell plans to open a shop in Edinburgh where people can do just that.

www.isabellbue­nz.co.uk

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