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Presented by logo Homo Faber by Michelangelo Foundation
© Laura Hinski ClickSka Photographer
Tracing Venice

Nicola Dobrowolski

Paper sculptor

“Working with paper came so naturally to me,” says Nicola Dobrowolski. When she looks at a piece of paper it’s never a flat piece of paper that she sees. It’s an opportunity. It’s the beginning of something wonderful. Nicola has been collecting paper from a young age. Respecting and valuing good paper is clearly something that has been passed down through the generations within her family, from her grandfather, a Polish artist who worked with paper in a sculptural form in the advertising industry, to her mother, and then herself. Nicola learnt the wonderful skill of model making during her training as a Theatre Designer. “This is where I was introduced to my scalpel,” she recalls. “The possibilities of paper in both its 2D and 3D form truly became apparent to me there.”

TechniqueStory

Nicola Dobrowolski recalls once being described as a 2.5-dimensional paper artist: not quite 2D, but not 3D either, and she truly relates to this description. Making these 2.5-dimensional artworks either in a box frame or in a cloche means that she can create wonderful depth of field. She can light them from within and cast beautiful shadows. They are mini stages, on which stories can exist. She specialises in storytelling through her intricate paper creations, merging multiple stories into one visual whole, and creating artworks that exist in a glass dome cloche. Many of her works represent an interaction between humans and nature.

Objects Magnae Chartae Exhibition Contact
dobrowolskidesigns@gmail.com
Discover on Homo Faber Guide

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