Berliner Boersenzeitung - Swiss paper cutting artist takes the scissors to old ways

EUR -
AED 4.298532
AFN 80.751725
ALL 98.013615
AMD 448.886144
ANG 2.094611
AOA 1073.180331
ARS 1537.482956
AUD 1.789367
AWG 2.108324
AZN 1.991184
BAM 1.954766
BBD 2.364379
BDT 142.284741
BGN 1.954317
BHD 0.44127
BIF 3458.283725
BMD 1.170316
BND 1.498862
BOB 8.091789
BRL 6.316894
BSD 1.171046
BTN 102.40371
BWP 15.6284
BYN 3.872036
BYR 22938.193234
BZD 2.352276
CAD 1.611502
CDF 3382.212864
CHF 0.942578
CLF 0.028434
CLP 1115.4293
CNY 8.39649
CNH 8.40449
COP 4708.848273
CRC 592.269017
CUC 1.170316
CUP 31.013374
CVE 110.6532
CZK 24.453753
DJF 207.988316
DKK 7.463679
DOP 72.150088
DZD 151.88696
EGP 56.547452
ERN 17.55474
ETB 163.697914
FJD 2.631748
FKP 0.866425
GBP 0.862417
GEL 3.154024
GGP 0.866425
GHS 12.317607
GIP 0.866425
GMD 84.849855
GNF 10152.491197
GTQ 8.981981
GYD 244.992042
HKD 9.186933
HNL 30.837882
HRK 7.532389
HTG 153.284339
HUF 395.270125
IDR 18846.944111
ILS 3.961315
IMP 0.866425
INR 102.346241
IQD 1533.113936
IRR 49299.56083
ISK 143.200436
JEP 0.866425
JMD 187.670735
JOD 0.829787
JPY 172.59117
KES 151.539555
KGS 102.226371
KHR 4689.456395
KMF 492.122522
KPW 1053.211278
KRW 1614.450968
KWD 0.357509
KYD 0.975863
KZT 630.182061
LAK 25278.825269
LBP 104801.796089
LKR 352.333639
LRD 235.816295
LSL 20.573929
LTL 3.455639
LVL 0.707913
LYD 6.348951
MAD 10.571487
MDL 19.550242
MGA 5196.20254
MKD 61.505628
MMK 2456.768579
MNT 4208.912788
MOP 9.468107
MRU 46.742411
MUR 53.41358
MVR 18.027089
MWK 2032.251524
MXN 21.82074
MYR 4.924108
MZN 74.853274
NAD 20.574457
NGN 1794.567277
NIO 43.009359
NOK 11.939377
NPR 163.845737
NZD 1.959836
OMR 0.449986
PAB 1.170991
PEN 4.126827
PGK 4.853772
PHP 66.31771
PKR 330.555538
PLN 4.250997
PYG 8771.360539
QAR 4.260538
RON 5.060799
RSD 117.13227
RUB 92.982067
RWF 1689.936277
SAR 4.391415
SBD 9.632393
SCR 17.255347
SDG 702.775855
SEK 11.171702
SGD 1.498572
SHP 0.919685
SLE 27.160965
SLL 24540.938595
SOS 668.843205
SRD 43.944167
STD 24223.177955
STN 24.986246
SVC 10.24658
SYP 15216.389898
SZL 20.574762
THB 37.844487
TJS 10.919451
TMT 4.107809
TND 3.36875
TOP 2.740993
TRY 47.717288
TTD 7.952556
TWD 35.055664
TZS 3048.672852
UAH 48.621283
UGX 4166.6715
USD 1.170316
UYU 46.895196
UZS 14672.835937
VES 155.362431
VND 30767.607149
VUV 139.911374
WST 3.110847
XAF 655.621424
XAG 0.030406
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.162838
XCG 2.110502
XDR 0.821957
XOF 659.469611
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.197679
ZAR 20.501832
ZMK 10534.249696
ZMW 26.962969
ZWL 376.841269
  • RYCEF

    -0.1000

    14.7

    -0.68%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    73.08

    0%

  • BCE

    0.6350

    25.135

    +2.53%

  • CMSC

    0.0980

    23.178

    +0.42%

  • RELX

    -0.0900

    47.74

    -0.19%

  • SCS

    0.2700

    16.46

    +1.64%

  • BCC

    3.3100

    87.57

    +3.78%

  • NGG

    0.2200

    70.5

    +0.31%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • JRI

    0.0260

    13.406

    +0.19%

  • VOD

    0.1250

    11.665

    +1.07%

  • BP

    0.0150

    34.085

    +0.04%

  • GSK

    1.0350

    39.255

    +2.64%

  • BTI

    -0.7300

    57.19

    -1.28%

  • AZN

    2.3500

    77.69

    +3.02%

  • RIO

    0.4300

    63.53

    +0.68%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    23.72

    +0.67%

Swiss paper cutting artist takes the scissors to old ways
Swiss paper cutting artist takes the scissors to old ways / Photo: Fabrice COFFRINI - AFP

Swiss paper cutting artist takes the scissors to old ways

Marianne Dubuis stared intently through a magnifying glass, using a slim cutter to make tiny incisions in paper as she carved out delicate tableaux of life and human emotions.

Text size:

The 64-year-old designer is reinventing the Swiss traditional art of paper cutting, which typically shows Alpine landscapes and cows heading to mountain pastures, by infusing a large dose of poetry and modernity.

Dubuis, a florist by training, told AFP that she has devoted herself to paper cutting since childhood and now spends around six hours a day on her passion.

At her home studio in Chateau d'Oex, in the Pays-d'Enhaut area where the Swiss tradition was born around 200 years ago, she showed off her craft, using scissors or a cutter to carve out intricate scenes inspired by the surrounding woods and the people she meets.

The works, either in black and white or in colour, have been shown in Switzerland, France, Germany and Japan.

Some of them, more than a metre (three feet) high, are on display until September 6 at the new Swiss Paper Cutting Centre in Chateau d'Oex, a picturesque village in the pre-Alps of western Switzerland.

"I am very proud of paper cutting, and what it represents of Switzerland. It is a way of representing our values, our roots," she said.

However, "if we keep doing the same things over and over, the tradition dies", said Dubuis, who wants to reinvent the art form in her own way.

- Classic Alpine scenes -

Paper cutting originated in Asia and spread to Europe around the 17th century.

Johann-Jakob Hauswirth, a farm worker who died in poverty in the 19th century, is considered the father of the art form in Switzerland.

When the opportunity arose, he took his scissors to scraps of paper and began creating naive representations of Alpine scenes, and the annual "poya" ritual of driving cows up the mountain to graze.

He would then leave them as a thank-you gift after a meal.

His works, as well as the more numerous creations of other masters in the field such as Louis Saugy and Christian Schwitzguebel, sell at auction for "several tens of thousands of francs (dollars)", according to Emmanuel Bailly, of the auction house Beurret & Bailly Auktionen.

Close to nature, Dubuis draws her inspiration from the forest.

Her cuttings, some of which likewise sell for tens of thousands of francs, reflect her emotions and also tell a life story, like a biography in carved paper.

"When I have a private commission, they come and tell me about their life," she said. "I put in what I feel about this person; the essence of what they told me."

- From William Tell to the UN -

This approach has brought comfort, help and relief, she said, citing a work created for a father who lost his son, or one for a couple on the verge of splitting up but who thought again after seeing the cutting representing the journey of their years together.

With Dubuis's work, "there is something spiritual", said Monique Buri, vice-president of the Swiss Paper Cutting Association, which has around 500 members.

Dubuis weaves in modernity with tradition to carve out images of Switzerland today.

At the end of 2021, she created a 50-square-centimetre work representing historical heroes like William Tell as well as chocolate, mountain rescue helicopters or the international organisations based in the country, such as the United Nations and the Red Cross.

Pierre Mottier, head of the association running the museum that houses the Swiss Paper Cutting Centre, said: "It's very nice to make little cows and chamois, but it's also very interesting to cut out other things."

Modernity also has its dangers, with an increasing number of companies making cuttings with lasers.

But Dubuis says she is not worried.

With laser machines, "the soul is missing".

(K.Lüdke--BBZ)