“A face tells a story of life,” says . The Danish artist is known for layering, crimping, and twisting paper into at a scale so large that the blooms often cloak entire walls and fill rooms with vibrant color. While she’s spent 14 years carefully sculpting these botanical sculptures, Scott-Hansen has been simultaneously at work creating self-portraits through the same techniques.
Sporting braided horns or framed with spiraling tendrils, almost like a lion’s mane, these expressive masks are in part diaristic as they capture a particular moment in life and translate feelings the artist might not otherwise express. “A bit like Giuseppe Arcimboldo, I combined elements like flowers and other floral details (some of which even resemble insects) and paired these into facial features matching how I felt inside,” she says.
Scott-Hansen is represented by , and you can find more of her work on .








Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article appeared first on .





