WEATHER ALERT

Tress sense

Esoteric hair works meant to muss up mores

Advertisement

Advertise with us

Sandra Klowak likes playing with hair, though not all of it is hers.

Read this article for free:

or

Already have an account? Log in here »

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Subscribe and receive a limited-edition Free Press branded hat or tote.

Digital Subscription

One year of digital access for only $205*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles

*First annual payment billed as $205.00 + GST for one year. This annual subscription will automatically renew at $233.00 + GST every 52 weeks (10% off the regular annual price of $259.35). Offer available to new and qualified returning subscribers only. Cancel any time.

To continue reading, please subscribe:

Add Free Press access to your Brandon Sun subscription for only an additional

$1 for the first 4 weeks*

  • Enjoy unlimited reading on winnipegfreepress.com
  • Read the E-Edition, our digital replica newspaper
  • Access News Break, our award-winning app
  • Play interactive puzzles
Start now

*Your next Brandon Sun subscription payment will increase by $1.00 and you will be charged $17.95 plus GST for four weeks. After four weeks, your payment will increase to $24.95 plus GST every four weeks.

Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 18/10/2025 (265 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Sandra Klowak likes playing with hair, though not all of it is hers.

Every day she twists and pulls, deftly twirling and looping strands into intricate shapes.

Petals bloom beneath her fingers, lank locks and wavy curls coil into tightly furled roses and wide-open blossoms with buttons for pistils.

Ruth Bonneville / Free Press
                                Artist Sandra Klowak began working with hair nine years ago. The art form originated in the 17th century and became especially popular in the Victorian era.

Ruth Bonneville / Free Press

Artist Sandra Klowak began working with hair nine years ago. The art form originated in the 17th century and became especially popular in the Victorian era.

The artist weaves and sculpts body matter into art for clients who want to memorialize loved ones in an intimate and profoundly personal manner.

Using traditional methods like wirework, where looped pieces of longer hair are twisted into shapes around wire, and flatwork, where shorter hair is cut into shapes and glued flat, Klowak’s custom-made pieces are modern interpretations of an art form which can trace its roots as far back as the 17th century.

“It became really popular in Victorian times, it was absolutely normal then, it was fashionable. We don’t quite know how to feel about it in our modern day, this kind of art it lives in a liminal space of sorts, but historically there was value to it,” Klowak shares.

Klowak’s foray into hair art started nine years ago. Her first piece was a small wreath created from her own hair.

Enamoured of the medium, she posted on her Facebook page, requesting friends to send her hair.

“It is odd to ask for these things,” she says, “but there is an element of odd to pretty much everything I do. I had been raving about hair art before so it wasn’t too strange for my friends, but there were some people who said ‘oh, gross,’ which is also fine by me.”

Fortunately her friends were more than happy to oblige, sending her dozens of cuttings. The donations continue to come in and the artist has amassed a healthy amount of hair which she uses to create artwork for her portfolio.

Klowak’s more recent works are a departure from the norm. They have a bit of a bite to them.

Pushing the boundaries of her practice, Klowak has started to incorporate teeth with hair, including human and animal, to form the new and rather more esoteric silhouettes of her four-piece series which sees her investigating conventionally held ideas of femininity.

“I began with the idea of a four-piece series featuring one tooth, almost like a jewel, at the centre of each. I also wanted to explore ideas of femininity, in a way that challenges the common/traditional stereotypes that define the feminine as meek, mild, palatable, unobtrusive, conforming, compliant. I wanted to upend a sense of comfort by using materials of the body which I feel contain a raw power,” she explains.

The four “women” — Sophia, Amphitrite, Annabella and Devana — were developed in a far more intuitive manner than Klowak’s meticulously planned and executed commission work for clients.

The names came to her first, followed by words (as seen on her Instagram account @corporealcurios) to go with each piece. From there she created the physical forms, eschewing her usual methods of working and allowing herself to be led by the concept and “essence” of the four characters, she shares.

The new work has an unnerving quality to it. Each piece is disconcerting on its own, discomfiting when viewed together with the others. The juxtaposition of body matter, both animal and human, twisted and unrecognizable, is alarming at first glance.

Ultimately, the animalistic and alien quality of the sculptures serves to provoke thought. The work is created to be experienced from a place of curiosity rather than judgment.

Working with teeth, especially wisdom teeth, has been an intense experience, evoking emotions Klowak has yet to process fully. It’s forced her to confront the reality of creating art from pieces of people’s bodies.

“It can be overwhelming to engage with unique materials which hold a lot of power,” she says.

“It hit me recently that this is somebody’s tooth. It made me pause and reflect on the intensity of the medium. It can be difficult and it can be uncomfortable, but I think it’s worth it. I like that I’m feeling things with my process and that I am practising something that speaks to me in a way I never could have imagined when I first started doing this.”

av.kitching@freepress.mb.ca

AV Kitching

AV Kitching
Reporter

AV Kitching is an arts and life writer at the Free Press. She has been a journalist for more than two decades and has worked across three continents writing about people, travel, food, and fashion. Read more about AV.

Every piece of reporting AV produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print — part of the Free Press‘s tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press’s history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.

Our newsroom depends on a growing audience of readers to power our journalism. If you are not a paid reader, please consider becoming a subscriber.

Our newsroom depends on its audience of readers to power our journalism. Thank you for your support.

Report Error Submit a Tip

More Stories

MMF buys long-vacant federal lab

Scott Billeck 5 minute read Preview

MMF buys long-vacant federal lab

Scott Billeck 5 minute read 6:00 AM CDT

The Manitoba Métis Federation has taken another major step in its effort to help revitalize downtown Winnipeg by acquiring the former National Research Council property on Ellice Avenue.

The federation has scheduled a news conference today to announce it has purchased the office tower, laboratory and parking lot at 435-445 Ellice Ave. The acquisition expands its downtown footprint to more than one million square feet of owned property and will eventually house about 70 per cent of its 1,300 employees.

The sale ends a years-long legal dispute between the federation and the research council. The federation had sued the federal agency after an earlier agreement to purchase the property collapsed in 2020.

“Everybody’s happy, they’re happy, we’re happy. And now we just got to start the transition of our plan,” federation president David Chartrand told the Free Press Thursday.

Read
6:00 AM CDT

Frustration, not fear, as Exchange swells after drug crackdown

Scott Billeck 6 minute read Preview

Frustration, not fear, as Exchange swells after drug crackdown

Scott Billeck 6 minute read Wednesday, Jul. 8, 2026

Natassia Brazeau says she doesn’t feel unsafe living and working in Winnipeg’s Exchange District — instead, she feels heartbreak.

She said that feeling intensified last week during the Winnipeg Police Service’s controversial 10-day crackdown on open drug use and drug trafficking which pushed people away from the Main Street strip.

Brazeau, who owns a business in the area, said she has never seen so many people head to the Exchange District at once.

“I’m absolutely enraged at the police response last week,” Brazeau said. “Not only was that incredibly short-sighted and doesn’t do anything, it doesn’t assist anyone that are already in incredibly vulnerable situations.”

Read
Wednesday, Jul. 8, 2026

Mayor flip-flops on cutting tree-planting budget after intense criticism

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Preview

Mayor flip-flops on cutting tree-planting budget after intense criticism

Joyanne Pursaga 4 minute read Yesterday at 6:16 PM CDT

Public opposition has prompted Mayor Scott Gillingham to change his mind about chopping $1.2 million from the city’s tree-planting program.

Read
Yesterday at 6:16 PM CDT

Puzzles Palace

1 minute read Wednesday, Jul. 8, 2026

To solve our puzzles, please subscribe with this special offer: |

An evening in the emergency room

Janine LeGal 5 minute read Preview

An evening in the emergency room

Janine LeGal 5 minute read 2:01 AM CDT

This situation needs immediate intervention. Anything less means nothing.

Read
2:01 AM CDT

Ready-to-go drinks fit for a scorching summer

Ben Sigurdson 5 minute read Preview

Ready-to-go drinks fit for a scorching summer

Ben Sigurdson 5 minute read 3:20 PM CDT

It’s mid-July, I’m just back from a little holiday and if I’m being totally honest, am suffering from a touch of post-vacay brain fog. It’s supposed to be scorching hot for the next few days. The Free Press arts and life crew is mainly tied up with attending and covering the Winnipeg Folk Festival, and prepping for Winnipeg Fringe Theatre Festival coverage as well.

In other words, rather than some educational deep dive into a grape variety or wine region for this week’s Uncorked, we’re keeping it simple. To that end, this week I tasted six drinks that fall into the ready-to-drink (RTD) category — think hard seltzers, coolers, pre-mixed cocktails and the like — selected mostly at random (although I made sure not to duplicate any particular flavour).

For the most part, the wildly popular RTD category offers boozy drinks that don’t taste like alcohol, often offering nostalgic flavours for drinkers of my particular vintage. It’s one of the only categories of alcohol that’s actually seeing a growth in sales.

Now, are these companies trying to appeal to us more seasoned imbibers looking for a taste of nostalgia, or are these flavoured RTD beverages meant to appeal to younger (and potentially underage) drinkers? That’s a debate/discussion for another time.

Read
3:20 PM CDT