Martha Siegel [MA 1987, Teaching]

I have explored many different media throughout my lifetime but often have returned to the materials that are tactile and with which the hand of the artist is visible in the results. The imperfections and “accidents” that occur with the use of papier mache have intrigued me, and, together with collage, have been the focus of my work in the past few years. I use various armatures that I craft myself from wire, plastic, balloons or newspaper, or that are found objects, and use these to create a library of shapes that are formed over the armatures but then removed from them once the papier mache has dried. I then use this “shape library” to form individual vessels, some inspired by historical references and others by imagination. The surface of each vessel is treated with strips of materials, sometimes fabric but most often strips of magazine papers, art papers, maps and dictionary pages, to create a patterned surface. The process for me is cathartic, as it harkens back to childhood processes and a sense of nostalgia that I return to repeatedly in my work, while also allowing me to explore a rich variety of patterns through the surface treatment of each piece.