Into the WoodsSCAD Museum of ArtSavannah, GeorgiaThrough June 7
One man’s trash is Eva Jospin’s treasure. Almost 20 years in the past, the French artist, now identified for her architectural, cardboard-based observe, skilled a inventive breakthrough after retrieving piles of containers from the sidewalks close to her studio. Up till that time, Jospin, who had studied each structure and portray, had primarily labored in two-dimensional media.
“I used to be at a useless finish, and I needed to utterly change the dimensions,” Jospin instructed AN. “For me, cardboard was freedom. It was like a rebirth as a result of my relationship to time, illustration, and materials utterly modified.” Her first U.S. museum exhibition showcasing this work, Into the Woods, is on view via June 7 at SCAD Museum of Artwork in Savannah, Georgia.
Jospin’s course of is echoed within the materials itself. “All the things is about layers. As a result of cardboard is layered, it comprises its personal shadow, so I’m able to work with the shadow within the piece, which [adds further dimension and depth],” stated the artist, noting that cardboard requires zero preparatory remedies, in contrast to most inventive media. As an alternative, Jospin can go straight in, utilizing scalpels, field cutters, and electrical sanders to carve and mould stacks of cardboard into spellbinding varieties that take months to excellent. “The work is about layers of time. I like geology, so cardboard in a short time grew to become a approach to characterize forest and vegetation as a lot as geology, historical past, and structure.”

The artist considers cardboard her ideally suited materials, because it’s agency sufficient to supply construction whereas being gentle sufficient to simply alter. She famous, “I like the contradictions—creating one thing very robust with one thing very fragile; creating artwork out of one thing thought of waste.” Plus, there may be the aspect of ephemerality and an acceptance that her work might finally be recycled once more. “It’s like drawing within the sand. It’s residing artwork.”
Contradiction can be on the coronary heart of Jospin’s chief inspirations. Her work incessantly depicts bushes impressed by precise forests in addition to their representations all through artwork historical past, for instance, tapestries that includes looking scenes. On the similar time, Jospin is fascinated by artificiality and human intervention. She particularly admires architectural follies outstanding in Baroque gardens, reminiscent of artifical grottos or ruins, that imitate structure however possess no perform (the actual fact these constructions had been typically seen as frivolous or absurd additional fuels Jospin’s curiosity). For Jospin, gardens and work can each be thought of compositions, the place views are deliberately framed to supply intriguing views.

There’s a way of discovery inherent in Jospin’s oeuvre. Freestanding sculptures and installations are conceived within the spherical, and exhibitions are supposed to be strolled via. Irrespective of the dimensions, the work is as intricate as it’s immersive with surprises (suppose shells and mini ladders) round each nook. “My work is about wandering,” stated Jospin, who strives for her landscapes to convey her personal reverence and concern for nature. “The work could be stunning and dreamy, however there’s a sense of petrification that displays my perspective round local weather change.”
Amongst Jospin’s strongest and profound works is Panorama (2016–2025), which at over 15 toes tall and 29 toes vast, envelops the viewer in its dense formation of towering tree trunks. Referencing 18th-century panoramas, the hauntingly poetic set up was initially commissioned for the Louvre and was not too long ago exhibited this spring on the Grand Palais in Grottesco, Jospin’s exhibition, which was impressed by the legend of a younger Roman who found misplaced frescoes upon stumbling right into a cave.
Jospin conceived one other monumental work, Chambre de Soie (2021–2024), because the backdrop for Dior’s Fall-Winter 2021–2022 high fashion present. Impressed by the Embroidery Room on the Palazzo Colonna in Rome, the artist collaborated with the Chanakya College of Craft in Mumbai, which works carefully with the style home, to embroider a 353-foot-long, garden-like panorama in 400 shades of silk thread. (Segments of Jospin’s Dior collaboration are a spotlight of SCAD’s exhibition.) From that time, embroidery grew to become a frequent function throughout Jospin’s work (she additionally works with the Amal Embroideries in Mumbai), whether or not it was including touches of shade to her sculptures (for instance, utilizing blue threads to evoke a waterfall) or incorporating threads into frames round two-dimensional works.

At each scale, from the intimate to the grand, and in each type, Jospin’s works encourage countless awe. Whereas nearly all of her installations and sculptures nearly wholly retain their unique cardboard brown hue, the element with which they’re carved, and their typically monumental scale, masks any indication that they’re composed of cardboard. “As an artist, you at all times need to recreate the fabric you utilize,” stated Jospin, who will debut a brand new large-scale set up with Galleria Continua at Artwork Basel this month. Sooner or later, she aspires to supply stage designs (an curiosity since childhood) and to create right here personal folly-filled backyard. “When an artist makes one thing particular, the fabric—whether or not stones, material, or portray—is transfigured. It’s possible you’ll not acknowledge that materials you thought you knew, because it has been given a brand new life.”
Stephanie Sporn is a New York–primarily based arts and tradition journalist who specializes within the intersection of artwork, style, and design.














