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  • Folklore and Nature Converge in Cat Johnstonโ€™s Expressive, Eccentric Puppets Kate Mothes
    A fashionable bat, a melancholy sun, and a springtime spirit with seasonal allergies are just a few of the characters conceived by Cat Johnston. Drawing on childhood memories, folk art, and nature, the London-based illustrator and model maker creates expressive sculptures and puppets that inhabit dreamlike realms. Invoking historical costumes and cartoonish and emotive faces, Johnstonโ€™s otherworldly cast seems both familiar and strange, as if childrenโ€™s book protagonists have sprung to lif
     

Folklore and Nature Converge in Cat Johnstonโ€™s Expressive, Eccentric Puppets

18 March 2026 at 14:42
Folklore and Nature Converge in Cat Johnstonโ€™s Expressive, Eccentric Puppets

A fashionable bat, a melancholy sun, and a springtime spirit with seasonal allergies are just a few of the characters conceived by Cat Johnston. Drawing on childhood memories, folk art, and nature, the London-based illustrator and model maker creates expressive sculptures and puppets that inhabit dreamlike realms.

Invoking historical costumes and cartoonish and emotive faces, Johnstonโ€™s otherworldly cast seems both familiar and strange, as if childrenโ€™s book protagonists have sprung to life or converged with a strange dream. Recent characters comprise a series of gods representing sunburn, hay fever, and insomnia, which alsoโ€”rather inconvenientlyโ€”are the sun, flowers, and the moon.

Johnston recently made her first short film in collaboration with stop-motion animator and fellow puppet-maker Joseph Wallace called โ€œThe Wickywock and the Jubjub Berry.โ€ As a mythical woodland creature deals with a bout of sleeplessness, a forest sprite appears with what seems like a practical solution, but things donโ€™t exactly go as planned.

Coinciding with a local pagan festival called the Hastings Traditional Jack in the Green, which occurs every first weekend of May, Johnston will have a small solo exhibition at a local pub called The Crown. In addition to signing on to work with London-based cinematic studio Passion Pictures as a director, the artist continues to explore the possibilities of film.

Johnston is currently working on a few ideas for animated series and hoping to develop a slightly longer format stop-motion project while also working on another short film, โ€œwhich will be a mix of live action puppetry and stop-motion animation and will feature two flowery monsters and an extremely cute bee,โ€ she says.

You might also enjoy the quirky Hieronymus Bosch-inspired figures of Roberto Benavidez.

A sad, abstract figurative puppet representing the sun in medieval clothing by Cat Johnston
โ€œSunburn.โ€ Photo by Malcolm Hadley
A scorpion puppet by Cat Johnston
A figurative puppet with embellished shoulder details by Cat Johnston
A sad, ogre-like figurative puppet by Cat Johnston
โ€œInsomnia.โ€ Photo by Malcolm Hadley
A bat-like figurative puppet by Cat Johnston
An elaborate paper puppet by Cat Johnston featuring floral and leafy elements with a sad expression
โ€œHay fever.โ€ Photo by Malcolm Hadley

Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $7 per month. The article Folklore and Nature Converge in Cat Johnstonโ€™s Expressive, Eccentric Puppets appeared first on Colossal.

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