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Australian artist Natasha Frisch celebrates the minute, forgotten and invisible objects of domestic life – a wooden stool worn with age, a weed growing between the cracks of a brick wall, a ladder leaning insolently in a corner. The artist meticulously replicates these ordinary objects as paper sculptures, transforming the mundane into artworks of fragile beauty. She then reinserts the mimicry back into the everyday, drawing our attention to a world that is often hidden in plain sight. Exploring ideas of perception, value, beauty and space, Frisch’s wondrous works invite us to pause and reconsider our world anew.
Megan Robson, Associate Curator, Museum of Contemporary Art Australia
Art Maze Magazine - Anniversary Edition - Issue 5 - October 2017 - PDF
CODA Paper Art 2017 - Discover Benelux - Issue 38 - February 2017 - PDF
Natasha Frisch - Building a Creative Future - Copyright Agency - April 2014 - PDF
Flora Society - Gallery Factory, Seoul - 27 March - 20 April 2014
On A Good Day - Catalogue - Gallery Brooklyn, New York - November 2013 - PDF
Natasha Frisch - The New York Art Residency and Studios Foundation - January 2014
The Paper Artist - Yen Magazine - Issue 63 - May 2013 - PDF
Little Trace of Natasha Frisch - Yellow Trace - 23 January 2013
New Work: Natasha Frisch - Art World Magazine - Issue 6 - Dec 2008/Jan 2009 - PDF
Agitating The Barriers Around Art and Galleries - The Age Newspaper - 17 Dec 2008 - PDF
Uncertain Landscapes - Catalogue - Dianne Tanzer Gallery + Projects 2008 - PDF