
Art in Hand
Clip: Season 5 Episode 34 | 6m 16sVideo has Closed Captions
A special look at local artist and handbag designer, Kent Stetson.
One Rhode Island artist is fashioning a high-style brand that screams for attention and starts a conversation. Kent Stetson took his pop art paintings off the wall and hung them right from your hand. Purses created in his Pawtucket workshop are popular accessories clutched worldwide by celebrities and colorful customers who want to make a bold statement.
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Rhode Island PBS Weekly is a local public television program presented by Rhode Island PBS

Art in Hand
Clip: Season 5 Episode 34 | 6m 16sVideo has Closed Captions
One Rhode Island artist is fashioning a high-style brand that screams for attention and starts a conversation. Kent Stetson took his pop art paintings off the wall and hung them right from your hand. Purses created in his Pawtucket workshop are popular accessories clutched worldwide by celebrities and colorful customers who want to make a bold statement.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship(machine whirring) - 22 years ago, if someone had told me I would be making purses from my artwork, I don't know if I would've been happy hearing that.
Now I'm living the dream.
- [Pamela Watts] The dream for Rhode Island artist Kent Stetson is being a designer of handbags; whimsical, colorful, topical.
They are all made by hand in his mill workshop and sold in hundreds of boutiques worldwide.
The purses are clutched by celebrities such as Martha Stewart, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Meghan Thee Stallion.
Not only do his bags star on the red carpet, they fly down the runway.
These are not your mother's pocketbooks; they are a fusion of art and accessory.
- I think, in terms of art, it's interactive.
It's modular.
I think it speaks in kind of an interesting way.
- [Pamela Watts] And an interesting twist carried Stetson into the world of high-fashion accessories.
Stetson grew up in this cabin on a working horse farm in New Hampshire.
He studied studio art and philosophy at Brown University and started out creating these digital hybrid paintings.
- So, computer generated paintings, at the time, we called it new media.
Today, I think it's just called digital art.
And so, these are very colorful, abstract pieces.
- [Pamela Watts] But Stetson admits he was unsuccessful selling his modern art, so he pivoted.
His plan B translated to "In the bag."
- I worked at a shoe store at the time, though, and I had a gift for convincing people to buy shoes and handbags that they didn't particularly need.
And so, I connected the dots.
- How did you land on purses as the frame for your artwork, of all things you could have picked?
- It was a way to package my art in a format that had some use.
A handbag gave me much more license to be fun than I ever felt I had permission to do with a piece hanging on the wall.
And so, almost instantly, I made pieces that were a little bit irreverent, and tongue-in-cheek, and funny.
- [Pamela Watts] Funny as in notoriously tasteful.
Stetson's popular confections feature donuts, animal crackers, sushi, and even Rhode Island's famous New York System wieners - [Kent Stetson] Three all the way.
New York System is an iconic Rhode Island comfort food, and so we had to translate it into a bag.
- Stetson says, when you carry one of his designer handbags, it starts a conversation and might make a friend, whether it's one of his doggy bags or a selection from his bar cart of popular cocktails.
they're a statement piece.
- It's an exclamation point on your outfit.
I mean, it does not get the silent treatment.
When you carry one of my pieces, it gets acknowledged.
- [Pamela Watts] Kent Stetson's signature handbags, which sell for between 150 and $300, support a number of charitable causes.
One style references the laced collar of late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
- When she passed, Mariska Hargitay used this bag on "Law and Order: Special Victims Unit".
- I just got an alert.
Irena's building.
- Okay, Kat, you and I will go up.
- The sales for this piece sort of went haywire.
And so, we donate the proceeds to the ACLU.
- [Pamela Watts] Others may tote an alligator handbag, supporting Everglades preservation.
- Everything start to finish is done right here.
- Stetson says making each purse takes 50 steps and three days to complete.
First, he creates an image, formats it on his computer, prints and laminates the canvas.
But while the process begins with high-tech innovation, the rest is old-world craftsmanship; hand-tracing and hand-sewing.
In general, Stetson's signature bags are slim envelope styles.
A lot of people look at it and say, "I can't get anything in this bag."
What do you say?
- It's a fun little going out bag.
Listen, if I made a larger bag, I'd have to leave Rhode Island.
We're the smallest state in the country.
I gotta be making small bags.
- Describe what it is you want people to see in this form of art.
- Well, I think I want people to know that I made this with love and a sense of joy, and I know that it's going to make an outing just that much more fun.
It's come from my hands, my studio.
I sign inside each piece as we sew them up.
And so, I want people to feel like they have a real connection to the creation of this piece, where it came from.
And I think this is sort of like the farm-to-table version of personal accessories.
- [Pamela Watts] Stetson says his customer's personality pops when they carry his fun-sized handbags.
And because of the artist's perseverance, these accessories will do all the talking for you.
- People are gonna say something.
You're gonna light up the room.
So, if you wanna be left alone, if you want chill, low-key evening, do not carry one of my pieces.
(Kent and Pamela laughing):
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipRhode Island PBS Weekly is a local public television program presented by Rhode Island PBS