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    Dressed to the Canines: Helga Stentzel Styles Playful Clothesline Illusions

    All images courtesy of Helga Stentzel, shared with permission

    Dressed to the Canines: Helga Stentzel Styles Playful Clothesline Illusions

    October 25, 2024

    ArtPhotography

    Grace Ebert

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    The cat’s pajamas take on new meaning in Helga Stentzel’s fashionable menagerie. Working in what she calls “household surrealism,” the London-based artist styles cheeky illusions from socks, sweatshirts, and even onesies that, once draped over a washline, appear like a cow grazing in a pasture or a sloth hanging lazily from a branch. Her latest projects roam from the snowy mountains of Austria to the River Thames to the brightly colored buildings of the island city of Burano in the Venetian Lagoon.

    Stentzel is currently collaborating with Portmanteau, a Helsinki-based performance company on a production with her chic compositions. She has select prints available in her shop, and keep an eye on Instagram for new clothesline creatures.

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    Clothesline Farm Animals Graze the Countryside in Playful Illusions by Helga Stentzel

    
    Art

    #animals
    #clothing
    #cows
    #humor

    February 23, 2021
    Grace Ebert

    “Pegasus.” All images © Helga Stentzel, shared with permission
    Instead of tossing an old pair of pants or T-shirt, Helga Stentzel puts her tired garments out to pasture. So far, the London-based artist has added Pegasus and Smoothie, a pair of clothesline equine and bovine, to her herd of playful interventions hung in bucolic landscapes. Stenzel’s practice, which she terms “household surrealism,” is derived from her childhood in Siberia, where she spent hours surveying her grandmother’s carpet, birch logs, and random objects for recognizable forms, including “a stack of buckets resembling the tower of Pisa,” she tells Colossal.
    Prints of the laundry creatures are available in Stentzel’s shop, and you can follow additions to the drove—the artist currently is creating a few more farm animals while braving the -32 degree weather in Russia—on Instagram, where you’ll also find a variety of quirky food-based characters. (via Laughing Squid)

    “Smoothie”

    #animals
    #clothing
    #cows
    #humor

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    Sprawling Roots and Richly Hued Gowns Permeate Mary Sibande’s Postcolonial Artworks

     From “A Terrible Beauty is Born” (2013), archival digital print, 43 1/4 × 126 × 3 inches. All images © Mary Sibande, shared with permission The immensity and depth of Mary Sibande’s multi-media artworks reflect the magnitude of her subject matter, which explicitly entwines the enduring effects of British imperialism and the apartheid. Through […] More

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    Living Chia Germinates from Clothing Abandoned on a Wash Line by Artist Bea Fremderman

     All images © Bea Fremderman Concerned with the ongoing climate crisis, Queens-based artist Bea Fremderman imagines an apocalyptic world of the not-so-distant future. Her living sculptures of everyday objects and clothing appear to have been abandoned suddenly, allowing nature to take over as quickly as humans left. “I think of them as relics of […] More