Meet Bea Szenfeld, the Stockholm-Based Paper Artist Whose Work Is Included in “Sleeping Beauty: Reawakening Fashion”

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Bea Szenfeld, 2016

Photo: Joel Rhodin

Editor’s Note: This interview with Bea Szenfeld was conducted in 2016 in connection with her “Everything You Can Imagine Is Real” exhibition at Bikini Berlin. We’ve revisited and edited this story as an artwork she exhibited then is included in “Sleeping Beauty: Reawakening Fashion.”

Never coming up flat is the work of Bea Szenfeld, a Polish-born, Stockholm-based artist whose medium is paper. Szenfeld worked as a ceramicist and sculptor before pursuing a fashion degree at Beckmans College of Design in Stockholm. After graduating, she landed a job in the industry. Quickly realizing that working with commercial clothes was not her thing, she “jumped back to work with clothes in art.”

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Bea Szenfeld, 2016

Photo: Joel Rhodin

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Bea Szenfeld, 2016

Photo: Joel Rhodin

Inspired by the experimental garments she made at school, Szenfeld chose to work again with paper, a material, she said, that “has its own plan, its own life. I can do whatever I can to make it comfortable and to stay the way it was from the beginning,” she explains, “but still sometimes the paper just does stay. I don’t even know what it’s going to do. I love working with paper; it’s like having a coworker.” Szenfeld’s handcrafted pieces command attention, and space; in some cases she has been limited to displaying only the garments that could fit through a museum’s doors.

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Bea Szenfeld, 2016

Photo: Joel Rhodin

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Bea Szenfeld, 2016

Photo: Joel Rhodin

Each piece is handmade in an analog process and is constructed using materials that can be found in any corner stationary or hardware store: scissors, tape, staples, bone folder, needle and thread, paper, sometimes a glue gun or drill. Some of Szenfeld’s pieces feature origami folds, others are accumulations of thousands of individual pieces, some separated by a small pearl. “I get a lot of help from my assistants, but I always do the last [bit]. I have to. The garments are so heavy that I really don’t know until we are done with all the pieces how I shall put it together.”



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