Project Presentation
I’m searching for archetypical images of modern city spaces. Places that everyone recognizes instantly. The suburbs with blocks of flats, shopping malls with similar shops everywhere, parks with perfectly cut rows of trees and bushes. Places without many specific characteristics, the so called non-places, places which are spread around the world like building blocks. But also places that are part of everyone’s existence: the park out of your childhood, the view from the bedroom window, the parking space at the supermarket.
From my own observations and images from the internet and computer games, I create sketches which I then develop into paper sculptures. Eventually these sculptures are photographed. By means of photography I create a frame within which I can layer nuances of realism.
I like to work with paper and cardboard because of the simplicity of the material. A white piece of paper almost stands as a symbol for empty or blank.
When creating the scenes I don’t hide seams, cuts and gluespots, for these are aspects that contribute to the experience of the cityscapes as a quickly build scenery, often destined to exist only briefly.
Squares, rectangles, circles are my working area from which I build my sculptures. I want to limit myself to the most simple forms. Details as windows, doors, curtains are hardly present. Only the basis remains. The paper sculptures can be seen as models without paint or decoration, a characterless blankness, with still a strong resemblance to the living world.





Yvonne Lacet (b. 1980) graduated in 2004 from the Utrecht School of the Arts. The same year she received the Steenbergen Grant and the Piet Bakker Prize. Since then, her work has been shown in various group and solo exhibitions in The Netherlands and abroad. For example: Galerie Bart, Amsterdam; Hyeres International Fashion and Photography Festival, Art Amsterdam; Chelsea Art Museum, New York; Foam, Amsterdam; G.A.S Station, Berlin; Cobra Museum, Amstelveen; Nederlands Fotomuseum, Rotterdam. In 2009 she received a grant from The Netherlands Foundation for Visual Arts, Design and Architecture to work as an artist-in-residence in Berlin.