MASSIMODECARLO Pièce Unique opens exhibition by Stephanie Temma Hier
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MASSIMODECARLO Pièce Unique opens exhibition by Stephanie Temma Hier
Stephanie Temma Hier, Bring me the sunset in a cup, 2024.



PARIS.- Intrusions by Stephanie Temma Hier manifests as a visual and material disruption that evokes memory and nostalgia. Through this exhibition on view at MASSIMODECARLO Pièce Unique, Hier employs bold imagery, rich materials, and striking colour to provoke the imagination.

Hier’s fusion of ceramic sculpture and meticulous painting draws on found imagery from cookbooks, fashion and nature magazines, stock photos, and personal photographs. By extracting these images from their original context, she creates a pastiche of memorabilia that resonates deeply with anyone who engages with her work. Hier breathes new life into these icons—many of which were once discarded or forgotten—reincarnating their significance within her artworks.

It is through the evocation of memory that these pieces function as ‘intrusions’. The sources she draws from reflect the aesthetics of domesticity and interior life from the recent past, particularly the 1980’s and '90s. Hier appears to upend the Martha Stewart-style ideals of domestic femininity from that era, reimagining these aesthetics through a contemporary, 21st -century lens. Psychologically driven, Hier creates tension by fusing the mundane with the uncanny. The sentimental and quotidian nature of her subjects is central to the artist's exploration, as she both cherishes and subverts them, imbuing them with entirely new surrealist energies. Recurring themes in her work include food, animals, fragmented bodies, dollhouses, clocks, and other symbols of childhood and domestic life. Each piece in Intrusions presents a material interruption, inviting the viewer to look deeper, think differently, and revel in the playfulness the artist creates—whether it is seductive and exuberant or slightly more sinister.

This duality is exemplified in Bring me the sunset in a cup, where a hand emerges holding a broken sculpture, and in Smothered, which depicts blood-red syrup pouring over a stack of pancakes and spilling onto a woman’s skirt. In both works, the female figures are partially absent from the frame. They intrude only to convey meaning, crossing the boundaries of the painting or ceramic object to make their presence felt.

Sensuality and eroticism are key elements in Hier’s practice, whether it's the depiction of a woman’s red-lipped mouth with a flower between her teeth, or that of unfurling cabbage leaves.

The intricate balance between nature and culture are also explored in this body of work, as patterns of the natural world are pilfered, transformed and flattened such as in the leopard print and honeycomb in Bring me the sunset in a cup. Here, the natural and manmade worlds collide, further blurring the boundaries between artifice and wilderness. Hier is holding up a mirror to how these universes intrude into one another, disrupting the constructed separation we often perceive there to be.

The dualities within Hier’s intrusions are also evident in her material choices. The use of handcrafted ceramics offers a double-entendre: a natural, malleable material used to represent other organic substances, such as food. Once fired and solidified, these ceramics, combined with carefully rendered paintings, become fixed objects that exist outside of the time and context in which the original references were conceived. The transition from fluid to solid form reflects the fragmented bodies that appear and disappear throughout Hier’s work—becoming entirely objectified and removed from their original, organic state.

Stephanie Temma Hier’s work emerges at the intersection of oil painting and ceramic sculpture. She creates meticulous works where paintings are often framed by their sculptural counterpart, commonly featuring domestic objects ranging from interior spaces to kitchen perishables and other quotidian objects. Her practice is centred around the amalgamation of found imagery which she translates through the convergence of ceramic and painting. Hier focuses on the re-presentation of icons from recent history; these can be drawn from vintage advertisements, late 20th century stock images as well as photographs captured from her own domestic life both current and past. Her work establishes a new context for her source material, producing unlikely, sometimes bizarre or uncanny fusions that allow her to create new narratives that evoke a deep physiological response. The artist’s chosen media plays an integral role in her nonlinear compositions. Ceramic, which requires an extensive production process, paired with her meticulous painting style, creates a symbiotic interaction between her chosen imagery. By seamlessly inviting her material subjects into a ripe new environment in which to mingle, Hier produces nostalgic yet playful pieces where tensions build between comedy and tragedy, always leaving their viewers wanting more.

Recent solo exhibitions include: CORRIDORS, Gallery Vacancy, Shanghai, 2024; Roadside Picnic, Bradley Ertaskiran, Montreal, 2023; This must be the place, Nino Mier, Brussels, 2023; Palate Cleanser, Nino Mier, Los Angeles, 2021; Soft Options, Hard Edges, Bradley Ertaskiran, Montreal, 2021; Swallowing the Pit, Gallery Vacancy, Shanghai, 2020.

Her works have been featured in group exhibitions at: Kotaro Nukaga, Tokyo; Deji Art Museum, Nanjing; Jeffrey Deitch, Los Angeles; Nino Mier, New York; Bradley Ertaskiran, Montreal; Kasmin Gallery, New York; Galerie Hussenot, Paris; Jack Hanley Gallery, New York. Hier was the recipient of multiple grants from Canada Council for the Arts, the Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation, and participated in residency programs at Salon Nino Mier Cologne; Storm King Art Center, New York; and Hospitalfield, Arbroath.










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