Nina Katchadourian: Fake Plants and Other Curiosities, on view from October 25, 2025 to March 8, 2026 at Feibes & Schmitt Gallery in the historic Hyde House, invites visitors into a playful and incisive exploration of art made from what is usually ignored or discarded. Known for working with everyday materials and self-imposed constraints, Katchadourian transforms the ordinary into the unexpected, revealing how creativity can emerge from limitation rather than abundance.
Central to the exhibition are works from Katchadourian’s ongoing
Fake Plants series. Constructed from paper food wrappers, disposable masks, sponges, toothpicks, and other cast-off items, these invented botanical forms blur the line between sculpture, satire, and observation. Neither replicas nor caricatures of existing species, the plants suggest an alternate ecosystem rooted in domestic life and consumer culture. A newly developed group of works incorporates upcycled industrial materials sourced from the nearby Finch papermill, weaving local history into the exhibition and extending the dialogue between the museum’s past and present.
Installed throughout the Hyde House, Katchadourian’s work interacts directly with the permanent collection, encouraging viewers to reconsider how institutions accumulate meaning over time. By inserting contemporary interventions into a historic setting, the exhibition highlights continuities between craftsmanship, reuse, and storytelling across generations. The contrast between refined interiors and humble materials sharpens awareness of value, authorship, and the quiet poetry embedded in everyday objects.
Also on view are selections from
Lavatory Self-Portraits in the Flemish Style, a series created entirely in airplane restrooms using a smartphone and improvised props. Drawing inspiration from early Netherlandish painting, these meticulously staged images merge humor with art historical reference, collapsing distance between past and present, high culture and lived experience. The airplane bathroom becomes a temporary studio where constraint fuels invention.
Together, the works in
Fake Plants and Other Curiosities celebrate attentiveness, wit, and transformation. Katchadourian’s practice reminds us that meaning often resides in what we overlook, and that even the most modest materials can carry imagination, history, and quiet wonder.
Image:
Nina Katchadourian (American, b. 1968) "Lavatory Self-Portrait in the Flemish Style #12," 2011 (Seat Assignment project, 2010-ongoing) C-print, Edition of 8 +2AP 12 3⁄4 x 10 3⁄4 inches. Collection of Hesu Coue-Wilson and Edward Wilson © Nina Katchadourian