Hey, Hot Shot! contender Heather D. Kehoe crafts scenes that are sort of absurd. Observational and humorous, her work puts life-sized paper dolls in real-life, and often suburban, scenes. I tend to like a lot of suburban-themed work. I don't like it at all, however, when I comb through entries and see multiple instances of not-so-hot imitations of any of the suburban greats. "The poor man's version of..." sometimes becomes a game, a tired trope (as do the oft-entered shopping carts and empty swimming pools - ugh). Kehoe's work, however, is original in scope. And, in the photo above, she uses little green army men, an icon I tend to like. (See some old Ryan McGinness.) It isn't clear whether she crafts these dolls herself, or if she procures them and places them in her scenes. It doesn't much matter. They help her tell her stories either way.
Guerrilla Gardening 08.07 by HHS entrant Heather D. Kehoe

