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Exhibitions


Hannah "Honey" Jaeger
Honey is the not so alter ego of multidisciplinary fine artist Hannah Jaeger. Honey (b. California, 1993) obtained her BFA from ArtCenter College of Art & Design in 2020 and currently works out of her home studio in Los Angeles focusing on both her latest body of work and commission pieces.
Raised in a religious and socioeconomically normative home, Honey found an emotional outlet in visual art from an early age. The weight and necessity of that outlet only increased after the death of her mother when Honey was still a child. In the heartbreak of that experience, art became a means of functioning in a world that seemed hopelessly dark. Where words failed, art did not.
"I've been making art for as long as I can remember. I work in a variety of mediums from paint to the ready-made, though I've been focusing on collage for the past few years. My artistic exploration delves into the depths of my perception of reality. My predilection towards paper collage intertwines complex layers of hidden messages and my internal monologue. It's all about the juxtapositions that make up our existence... death and rebirth, trauma, sexuality, feminism. Through my work, I hope to create a space for dialogue and introspection. It is an invitation to connect, to reflect, and to find solace in the shared experience of navigating the delicate pathways of pain and healing. In the vulnerability of creation, we discover strength, and in the act of sharing, we find a community bound by the universal threads of human resilience.
Exhibition Description
"Honey Has You" is an immersive installation built around a glowing pink neon sign, encircled by hand-sewn black-and-white striped tentacles that erupt across the gallery wall and ensnare eight framed analog collages. These tentacles represent Honey’s agency, both playful and invasive. As they pull viewers into a surrealist theater of feminine power, media distortion, and institutional control. Using hand-cut ephemera, illusion paper, and layered symbolism, the collages explore themes of autonomy, surveillance, religious dogma, emotional struggle, and the quiet resilience of resistance.

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