

A public artist who transforms community histories into tangible, often wearable, sculptures and installations that live in the streets.
Paul Kuniholm operates in the space where art meets civic memory. His work is not confined to gallery walls; it spills into the public right-of-way, taking the form of sculptural objects, murals, and what he calls 'wearable art interventions.' Each piece is a deep dive into local heritage, a narrative made physical. He works with digital and traditional materials to create pieces that are sometimes permanent, sometimes fleeting, but always in dialogue with their environment. His international projects function as community portraits, asking people to see the history embedded in their everyday paths. Kuniholm's practice is a form of storytelling that makes the past accessible and tactile, inviting direct public engagement rather than passive observation.
1946–1964
The largest generation in history at the time. Shaped by postwar prosperity, the Vietnam War, the sexual revolution, and Watergate. They questioned every institution their parents built — then ran them.
Paul was born in 1960, placing them squarely in the Baby Boomers. The events that shaped this generation — postwar prosperity, civil rights, Vietnam, and the counterculture — shaped the world they entered and the choices available to them.
The biggest hits of 1960
#1 Movie
Swiss Family Robinson
Best Picture
The Apartment
#1 TV Show
Gunsmoke
The world at every milestone
Kennedy-Nixon debates become first televised presidential debates
US sends combat troops to Vietnam
US withdraws from Vietnam; Roe v. Wade decided
Apple Computer founded; US bicentennial
First test-tube baby born
MTV launches; first Space Shuttle flight; AIDS identified
Hubble Space Telescope launched; Germany reunifies
Y2K passes without incident; contested Bush-Gore election
Deepwater Horizon oil spill; iPad launched
COVID-19 pandemic shuts down the world
“My art lives on the street, not behind a gallery's locked door.”