Marine Animal Masks by Liz Sexton Highlight Beloved Species in Lifelike Papier-Mâché

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All photographs © Liz Sexton, shared with permission. Images in collaboration with Ben Toht

In the event you really feel like a fish out of water, the saying goes, you then’re in all probability feeling slightly confused or uncomfortable. St. Paul-based artist Liz Sexton offers the simile new that means with latest marine-themed additions to her ongoing papier-mâché masks collection, highlighting the distinctive faces of acquainted creatures like walruses, manatees, and polar bears that discover themselves out and about on dry land.

Sexton enjoys papier-mâché for its versatility and accessibility, utilizing extra available supplies like material, wire, and acrylic paint to construct up every animal’s distinctive textures, patterns, and colours. Comprising her upcoming solo exhibition Out of Water on the Minnesota Marine Artwork Museum, the lifelike wearable sculptures draw consideration to quite a lot of beings that depend on aquatic ecosystems for survival. Barnacles and belugas are photographed in atmospheric settings by the artist’s associate and collaborator Ben Toht, who captures every animal’s distinctive particulars and expressions.

Lots of Sexton’s sculptures painting species that, of their native habitats, are beneath menace as they more and more turn into entangled in nets and undergo the results of the local weather disaster. The fragile and sometimes awkward stability between the human-made surroundings and pure ecosystems is highlighted in images of the masks in atmospheric settings by the artist’s associate and collaborator Ben Toht. The portraits playfully juxtapose the creatures with uncommon places like a grocery retailer freezer aisle, a campground, or a laundromat.

Out of Water opens Might 6 and continues by way of September 3 in Winona, and yow will discover extra work on the artist’s web site and Instagram.

 

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