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Reading: Folklore and Nature Converge in Cat Johnston’s Expressive, Eccentric Puppets — Colossal
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BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Artists > Folklore and Nature Converge in Cat Johnston’s Expressive, Eccentric Puppets — Colossal
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Folklore and Nature Converge in Cat Johnston’s Expressive, Eccentric Puppets — Colossal

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 18 March 2026 15:00
Published 18 March 2026
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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, Johnston’s otherworldly cast seems both familiar and strange, as if children’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 also—rather inconveniently—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 “The Wickywock and the Jubjub Berry.” As a mythical woodland creature deals with a bout of sleeplessness, a forest sprite appears with what seems like a practical solution, but things don’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, “which will be a mix of live action puppetry and stop-motion animation and will feature two flowery monsters and an extremely cute bee,” she says.

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

“Sunburn.” 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
“Insomnia.” 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
“Hay fever.” Photo by Malcolm Hadley

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