Amy Genser

"Using paper as both material and pigment, I create dimensional, textural works built from thousands of hand-rolled paper elements. Each small module is shaped, placed, and layered by hand, forming organic surfaces that reference naturalsystems such as waterways, cellular growth, erosion patterns, and shifting landscapes.
My work lives in the space between the micro and the macro. From a distance, the pieces read as expansive aerial views or evolving ecosystems. Up close, they reveal individual units—repetitive, quiet actions that slowly accumulate intocomplex structures. I am drawn to this tension between chaos and order, between the unpredictability of nature and the deliberate, meditative nature of making.
The natural world is a constant source of inspiration—moving water, barnacles and moss, beehives, rock formations, andthe subtle rhythms found in biological processes. These forms mirror how I experience both landscape and life: layered, interconnected, and continuously in flux. My compositions are not planned in a fixed way. Instead, I respond intuitively as the work grows, allowing patterns to emerge through repetition, density, and subtle shifts in color and texture.
The slow, labor-intensive process is essential to the meaning of the work. Rolling and placing each element becomes aphysical record of time, attention, and presence. This method reflects my interest in how small gestures—often unseen or overlooked—can shape larger systems, whether in nature or in human experience.
Through these tactile, immersive surfaces, I aim to create spaces that invite pause and close looking. The work offers a moment of quiet observation, encouraging viewers to move between intimate detail and expansive perspective, and to consider how interconnected forces—natural, emotional, and environmental—continually shape the world around us."