In 1994, Stoll started his
art career by
casting paraffin and
beeswax mixed with
pigment to form the
uncanny, handmade duplicates of
Tupperware. The
colors sometimes perfectly match the Tupperware
palette, while other times they appear like faded memories. The resulting
sculptures have a soft, chalky quality that contrasts with the hard,
manufactured plastic of the originals. Stoll has made
Toilet Paper Rolls that are meticulously
carved from
pine wood, making every layer of tissue visible on their sides. Stoll adds
spackle it to create its textured, fibrous surface that mimics the appearance of real
toilet paper, turning the disposable consumer product into a durable,
artisanal object. Others he's made include
toilet paper dispensers that are installed in the wall. The toilet paper is replaced with a roll of delicate
silk chiffon. Filmmaker and art collector
John Waters has one installed in the wall of his
Greenwich Village apartment, titled Untitled (wall inset toilet paper roll, hung backwards, 1997). Waters has said that when he walks into the room, he feels compelled to unwind it, because "it's chiffon!". Besides Stoll's sculptural works, he's also made wall-hanging works. In the
Sponges, a series of carefully perforated blocks of
balsa wood, the size of
household sponges, are colored with
alkyd paint. Skillfully executed to appear as a kitchen sponge and
humorously presented as if they were
minimalist paintings,
juxtaposing the colors in sets of two or three and hanging them on the wall. Also, Stoll created
Spirograph drawings that commented on
Geometric and
OP Art, inspired by his discovery of failed
Spirographs at a children's
movie promotional event, where one of the activities involved creating Spirographs that utilize gears within gears to produce geometric forms. Stoll discovered that when the gears didn't engage properly, the children's drawings were imperfect and abandoned. Stoll, drawn to the imperfections, would gather them up and painstakingly
trace every detail of the failed Spirographs with colored pencils. Later, he would show them, elevating the children's failures as framed works of art on
translucent paper. Stoll's
Holidays series memorializes how Americans consume and celebrate their holidays by offering up the debris they leave behind through the thoughtful dedication and care he brings to his works. In the
Vanitas Vanitatum series (vanity of vanities), Stoll uses the artistic tradition of
vanitas to critique the futility of
materialism and its enabler,
consumerism, by
embroidering silk organza silhouetted cutouts of
gold coins,
golf courses, fleshy
steaks,
looted antiquities,
crowns,
jewels, etc., to provide a droll index of what we lust after in this life. He stages these
dramas with a cast of
skeletons and
skulls in
shadow boxes hung on the wall. == References ==