Anny “Fyno” Newport makes dolls, rock houses and other musings from what she finds in dumpsters, thift stores and on beaches. (June Leffler/ KSTK)

 

To put it simply, Anny “Fyno” Newport is an artist. She’s known throughout Wrangell and Southeast for her collections, crafts, and oddities. 

Locals may have seen Anny out peaking in the local dumpsters.

“My scrounge master friend, she kind of taught me, and what kind of tools you need: gaf hook, grabber, little stool and a stick to hold the lid up so it doesn’t hit you in the head,” she says. “And that has happened to me before, it hurts.”

Dumpsters are part of her daily routine.

“It took me a little bit of getting used to digging in dumpsters, cause I thought what do people think of me,” she says. “But I don’t care anymore… some people think it’s just gross but you just get tough.”

 

 

If you have seen her and wondered ‘what is she doing?’ The answer is that she’s looking for supplies for her next project.  

Hanging from her ceiling are mobiles. One’s made from broken glass, another from toothbrushes, and one of colorful bones.

She got these bones after a mink killed her chickens, so naturally she thought “Hey I’ll make a mobile out of that”. She’s an expert at re-purposing things, and not just things that were once inside a living animal.   

A shoe sole in her workshop acts as a sign. One side is painted “Welcome”, the other “Go Away”.

What could’ve been considered trash, she makes completely new with just a few strokes of paint.

And some things take a lot more than that. Like the Brazen Brassiere. It’s a huge bra embellished with beads, tassels, and ribbons. The boobs are huge, filled-in with insulation foam. And she clearly enjoys seeing people wearing it. She pulls out a photo album just of people wearing it.

“There’s [my husband] Dan. He wanted a haircut and I told him you get your picture taken in the bra and you can have a haircut,” Anny says.

 

The Gum Glob is a piece made of collected already been chewed, or ABC, gum. Anny started the piece about 30 years ago. (June Leffler/ KSTK)

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