Summary Of The Garden Of Paper By Orna Feinstein

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Garden of Paper Paper is common in some lives more than others. Some people may use paper to write down a note to themselves while others may sketch a portrait of themselves. Paper is used everyday in our lives though. There are many ways to use paper in which the common person does not. As artists, we are constantly looking at things and changing them, making them something new. This is no different with paper. Some artists solely work with paper, twisting it and folding it. Orna Feinstein is a contemporary artist that looks at paper and sees exquisite, room large sculptures and beautiful monoprints. Born in Jerusalem, Orna Feinstein is known for her monoprints and her other paper …show more content…

Feinstein wants to focus on experimentation and innovations in the field of monoprint making as well as other paper creations. In order to do this Feinstein will sometimes print on uncommon materials like plexiglass. Printing on these types of objects gives the piece different textures and dimension. In Feinstein’s process, she carefully chooses color and the composition, refining it to be something elegant as well as organic. Her pieces are not always colored, choosing what to keep monochromatic is just as important to Feinstein. She sometimes combines color with black and white, activating the pieces and transforming them into these printed illusions, rich and lively. Strategic placements of the shapes transforms these pieces into tree rings, or seeds splitting open with life. In Feinstein’s series Tree Spirit, she uses this circle pattern to symbolize meditation as well as the natural process of repetition, growth, and evolution. In projects like Multi-librium or Papellibrium, Feinstein used a similar process to paper quilling expect with much larger pieces of paper. The paper used for Multi-librium was art exhibit invitations that Feinstein had collected over the years. A decent amount of the paper was also donated by galleries that represented Feinsten. Feinstein would stitch the pieces together, this would ensure that the pieces would stay together, and when she was done she would store them to preserve their shape. Feinstein is constantly trying to push her art into new ways, trying to see what makes the art art feel alive, what makes the art

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