
WELCOME TO STARS MAGAZINE
Welcome to STARS, our annual magazine dedicated to illuminating contemporary artists working in new and unique ways. In an ever-evolving landscape of creativity, STARS serves as your essential guide, bringing you closer to the artists who are shaping today's visual culture and defining tomorrow's artistic movements. Our year long conversation culminates in our print edition released at our Miami Art Week Fair.
DESCRIBE YOUR CREATIVE PROCESS
Hi there! I am Melissa Haims and I'm a sculptor based in Philadelphia. I create large-scale installations, knit graffiti, and soft sculpture, using traditional handwork methods like knitting, crochet, and weaving. I also sew unconventional quilts using found and vintage fabrics paired with subversive text. The majority of my work is produced using post-industrial pre-consumer waste.
When I begin to design a large-scale installation I always start with "why". Why is this subject significant? Why should I document this? Why should people know about this? Why should the audience be compelled to engage? Since I work in textiles, the next thing to consider is "how". How am I going to build this? How am I going to transport it, exhibit it, manage it? Scale can be difficult and has led me to my own demise. Once. Maybe twice. Textile work (like knitting, weaving, or sewing) is process heavy and I love getting into the weeds. Handwork (what we call the act of the aforementioned) allows a lot of time for thought, reflection, and conversation. All of these ingredients are important for any project to succeed. Especially when the community gets involved.
Community engagement is vital to my work. Creating with an audience can be fulfilling but also frightening. There have been many tragically beautiful moments in my career whether it was in a fair booth, a gallery or museum. And I treasure each one. I remember one of the earliest experiences I shared with a fair goer was ten years ago at the Satellite Art Show in Miami when a young man walked into my space and immediately started to cry. I was walking around the booth while knitting and he had just lost his grandmother. The act of knitting, being surrounded by yarn, and the smell of wool overloaded his senses. There were a lot of tears followed by a lot of laughs. And that's exactly what I want people to take away from my work: pure and unadulterated joy. That will make more sense in answer to question 4, btw. [insert winky face here]
So the next question is "and then what". What can I use to engage the audience to work with me? What can everyone do with a little bit of direction? Not everyone can knit or crochet. But with guidance, everyone can sew. Everyone can weave, and make knots. That's what I love about making interactive textile work: we're never allowed to touch anything in a gallery or a museum but my work is made to be handled.
WHAT ARE THE CORE CONCEPTS IN YOUR WORK?
The majority of my work is based on death, dying, and mental illness. These aren't the prettiest things to talk about, nor are they the subject that people want to bring home and hang on their walls, but they are important. They are essential. And the more we talk about them, the more comfortable we can be with grief. People don't want to talk about dead children and gun violence. We don't want to talk about mental illness. No one wants to talk about the "broken system" but fixing the system is crucial. This is why I work. These are the things that we need to be talking about to make progress. And if I can talk with you about it then maybe you can take that and bring it to someone else. And that's how we can move things forward. That's how we can heal ourselves and our communities.
WHAT ARE YOUR IMMEDIATE AND LONG TERM GOALS?
In the next 12 months I'd like to finish some UFO's (Un-Finished Objects) that have been occupying the far corners of my brain and my studio. Further afield I'd like to explore residencies, specifically ones that are independent and remote. I love the idea of being so far off the grid that the only thing I can do is make work. No phones, no internet or TV. Nothing to distract me from making. Except not so remote that I can't swing by the shop and pick up a bag of chips.
IS THERE ANYTHING ELSE YOU WANT TO TELL US?
I am often asked how I manage the devastating sadness in my work. Dissociation is fairly easy once you circumvent the enormity of the subject matter. *But in reality, I think that grief is just the price we pay for love. Grief is healthy. Jamie Anderson, best known for his work with Dr. Who, says it beautifully. “Grief, I've learned, is really just love. It’s all the love you want to give, but cannot. All of that unspent love gathers in the corners of your eyes, the lump in your throat, and in the hollow part of your chest. Grief is just love with no place to go.”
DESCRIBE YOUR CREATIVE PROCESS
The core drive behind my practice is to create immersive environments for healing and learning. I have always been heavily inspired by music, including my background growing up with experimental electronic music and raves in Texas as well as touring as a choirgirl around ages 9-14. I am particularly drawn to ambient music and interested in poetic chants throughout the history of civilizations, ways that sound has drawn together people over millenia. I see my sculptures, light art, music, performance, poetry etc. as activations within my attempt to translate harmonies from nature into designs with new architecture.
Nature and its patterns are a direct inspiration for me, as well abandoned structures, as well as sun and water refractions. I document these minute details wherever I travel through photos and videos, and later incorporate the inspired patterns into my hand-cut sculptures and large scale forms.
Through my public sculpture practice, I work to create lasting environments for imagination and play. To help build diverse representation in public art, I employ LGBTQ, disabled, POC, and underrepresented artists when I direct the budgets to create my public works. My public sculptures aim to reflect powerful natural elements, create meditative environments, and inspire dreaming for all ages.
WHAT ARE THE CORE CONCEPTS IN YOUR WORK?
Eastern European folk tales from my upbringing in Russia, which center the witch, filter heavily into my understanding of mysticism and storytelling. I see my sculptural objects as artifacts from a synthetic whole, an expansive performance ranging from research of natural moss patterns to poetry, light art and theatre. Light is the fluid medium serving as the foundation of my practice, determining how audiences interact with my immersive environments. Through my sculptures, performances, videos and installations, I use ever-evolving modular forms to transform space and examine perception. My intricately hand-cut light sculptures, the Fairy Organs, draw on the myths of the fairies and today's malleability of human appearance in both physical form and online. I perform with these works as a character called “The Oracle,” who I see as giving birth to the living sculptures, channeling an archetypical woman sorceress.
WHAT ARE YOUR IMMEDIATE AND LONG TERM GOALS?
Cultivating sustainable, diverse and accepting creative communities has always been my goal, and being a part of the community in New York City is both a gift and a privilege. I look forward to organizing more public art projects as well as curated events here and around the world. I would particularly love to collaborate with a science center like CERN or a center for astronomical research, since my visual art is concerned with translating the patterns and languages of nature into new healing forms.
I’m making more pop music as ORACLE666 and looking forward to performing more. I am also continuing to work on a book on Vector Gallery and my time with the Crown Prince of Hell, JJ Brine.
IS THERE ANYTHING ELSE YOU WANT TO TELL US?
I am thrilled that several of my permanent public sculptures have opened recently, including “Dream Waves” commissioned for the History & Culture Trail in Tallahassee, Florida. I am looking forward to documenting five total permanent public works that are being unveiled one by one, my monumental large-scale sculptures.
DESCRIBE YOUR CREATIVE PROCESS
My work is labour intensive, because it’s all sewn by hand. I take a travel sewing kit with me in my purse everywhere I go and make hundreds of small parts. This portable studio allows me to find time here and there to chip away at a larger project. When all the parts are complete, I assemble everything in my studio. I also like to incorporate bits from older sculptures, after I’ve already shown them in an exhibition. They get cut apart and mixed in with the new pieces, which adds more visual variety to the final piece.
WHAT ARE THE CORE CONCEPTS IN YOUR WORK?
Some of the core concepts in my work are anxiety, death, and growth. I like to show the surprisingly positive aspects of my social anxiety that are sometimes misunderstood. I think there’s a strange beauty to the energy and heightened awareness that anxiety can give - like how fantasy and anxiety are two sides of the same coin. I often use taxidermy as a way to explore the theme of death. By dressing up the taxidermy creatures, it can make the idea of death more approachable. I also like using different metaphors for growth – such as molting and flayed creatures – in my work. Showing creatures shedding their skin can symbolize me moving past my anxieties and fears.
WHAT ARE YOUR IMMEDIATE AND LONG TERM GOALS?
As a goal, I would love to do more residences.
JOHN O’DONNELL
WEBSITE: www.johnodonnellprojects.com
Instagram: @johnodonnellprojects | @weirdmusicnight
DESCRIBE YOUR CREATIVE PROCESS
My creative process is rooted in long-term performance investigation, where identity, transformation, and media influence unfold over time. My 21-year performance project—structured into the Pre-Teen Age, Teen Age, and Post-Teen Age—functions as both a conceptual framework and a lived exploration of performance as a medium.
Each performance begins with an image, an object, or a cultural trope that sparks a deeper interrogation. Often, these references come from cartoons, pop culture, childhood nostalgia, or absurd media moments that have imprinted on my subconscious. I approach these sources with a mix of fascination and critique, exploring how their simplicity conceals deeper, sometimes violent, ideological structures.
From there, my process is both improvisational and highly structured. I create loose scores, build costumes, and assemble props that amplify the performative space, ensuring the work retains an element of spontaneity. Many of my performances rely on physical endurance, ritualized play, and destruction, allowing objects—and my own body—to deteriorate in real-time.
A crucial part of my process is understanding performance as a lived experience, not just an isolated event. My long-term commitment to this project means that each phase of my life informs the next iteration of my work. Whether I’m embodying the mischievous energy of Pre-Teen Age, the self-conscious spectacle of Teen Age, or the sonic experimentation of Post-Teen Age, my performances document the passage of time—on both a personal and cultural scale.
WHAT ARE THE CORE CONCEPTS IN YOUR WORK?
At the core of my work is transformation—of identity, performance, and time itself. My 21-year performance project is structured around shifting personas that evolve from childhood to adulthood, mirroring both cultural archetypes and personal experience. This framework allows me to explore themes of media influence, nostalgia, rebellion, and the absurdity of growing up.
1. Identity, Performance, and Transformation
My work examines how identity is shaped by external forces—especially media, cartoons, and pop culture.
Through performance, I engage in a long-form embodied critique of these forces, allowing my persona to evolve over time (Pre-Teen Age → Teen Age → Post-Teen Age).
I embrace the liminal spaces between adolescence and adulthood, questioning whether identity is ever fully stable.
2. Media and the Construction of Reality
I explore how televised cartoons and fictional characters inform perceptions of the world.
Characters like Bart Simpson, Huck Finn, and Dennis the Menace become avatars for exploring rebellion, authority, and mischief.
Cartoon logic, spectacle, and exaggeration serve as a lens for understanding violence, power, and ideological control.
3. Play, Ritual, and the Body
Many of my performances are structured around playful yet destructive actions, such as smashing piñatas, sliming myself, or interacting with precarious objects.
Ritual and endurance are key—my body often becomes a site of transformation, degradation, or failure.
The audience is not just a passive observer but often part of the event, the chaos, or the spectacle.
4. Humor, Absurdity, and Spectacle
My performances often embrace humor and absurdity, not as an escape but as a way to reveal uncomfortable truths.
Inspired by performance art, slapstick, and cartoons, I create moments that are simultaneously funny and unsettling.
Spectacle is both a tool and a trap—a way to lure in the audience but also to confront them with the unexpected.
5. Time, Death, and Legacy
My 21-year project is tied to mortality and intentionality, shaped by the loss of my father at age 21.
Each phase of the project is a meditation on the passage of time, the body’s inevitable transformation, and the cultural narratives we inherit.
By structuring my work over two decades, I engage with the idea of performance as a lifelong practice, where the art is inseparable from lived experience.
At its core, my work is about inhabiting the contradictions of being human—childish yet serious, playful yet violent, structured yet chaotic. It is an ongoing process of becoming, failing, and becoming again.
WHAT ARE YOUR IMMEDIATE AND LONG TERM GOALS?
Immediate Goals: Expanding Weird Music Night and Pushing Performance Further
Right now, one of my biggest focuses is expanding Weird Music Night as both an event and a platform for experimental performance. Weird Music Night was born out of a desire to create a space where sound-based projects, performance art, and experimental music could collide in unpredictable ways. I want to continue cultivating that chaotic, interdisciplinary energy—giving artists the room to take risks and audiences the opportunity to experience something entirely unexpected.
I’m also thinking about how Weird Music Night can evolve beyond its current format. This means:
Curating more site-specific events—taking performances beyond traditional venues and activating unconventional spaces.
Deepening collaborations with musicians, artists, and performers, pushing more hybrid performances that merge sound, visual art, and live action.
Expanding the audience—finding ways to bring in people who might not traditionally engage with performance art or experimental music.
Building stronger documentation—archiving these performances through video, audio, and writing to create a record of the ephemeral moments we’re generating.
Long-Term Goals: Creating a Lasting Performance Archive and Bridging Past and Future
In the long run, my goal is to ensure that both my own performance practice and the work happening at Weird Music Night exist within a broader historical and theoretical context. Performance art, like underground music, is often fleeting—many of the most powerful moments disappear as soon as they happen. I want to explore ways to document, analyze, and preserve these performances without losing their inherent ephemerality.
Long-term, I also see Weird Music Night becoming a vital hub for experimental performance, sound, and art. I want to cultivate:
A network of artists who share the spirit of risk and play—whether through sound, movement, improvisation, or destruction.
A space where the historical lineage of performance art collides with contemporary noise, punk, and experimental practices.
A bridge between past performance traditions (from 1980s punk to Dadaist spectacle) and the future of performance in a world increasingly mediated by digital and AI-driven culture.