Monday, January 26, 2015

Women's Studio Workshop: Art-in-Education Residency


I am currently in upstate New York doing an Art-in-Education Artist Book Residency at the Women's Studio Workshop. Its just the start of my second week of the ten-week residency. I teach papermaking to eight-graders for two days every other week. So far I have taught one class and it was great fun! While I am here I will be working on a new book project. The book questions the taxonomical system of classification, Systema Naturae, created by Carl Linnaeus, currently in place and widely used by us today. During the research phase of this project I learned that the system does not take into account the fact that everything is constantly evolving. This was a problem- one that remains largely unsolved. The system is therefore somewhat arbitrary. To highlight this arbitrariness I devised my own classification system- one that categorizes things in the natural and man-made world according to their basic geometric shape. Very broad and arbitrary.

* Lizz just posted an update on the progress of my book on WSW website. Read it here.*


  This is the main building of WSW, where all the studios are





The printmaking
studio





The paper making studio, where I am teaching the class




 A student from Bailey Middle School creating a self-portrait using embedments in
between a sheet of Corn and Abaca




 Couching!




 More wonderful self-portraits





Clean up was super-efficient and well done by the class



 
 This is an early mock-up of the book I am working on here. The cut-out shapes highlight the
illustrations/objects that fall into the category of the taxonomy of the circle





 
A pumpkin, a bulb, an octopus and a button are in the category of the circle



 

The taxonomy of the triangle   





Things like a pear, a slice of pie, a mountain, stamens, kites are all in the same category because they are all the same general shape of the triangle






  The latest mock-up of the pages looks something like this. Its easier to handle, and larger because it lacks two folds





  Creating new images. The earlier iteration of the book had the taxonomies of the circle, square, rectangle and triangle.
I decided not to include the rectangle since its more of a secondary geometric shape in my mind





 
An option instead of cutting out shapes was to make the paper for the overlays with the shapes as very fine watermarks. For this, we decided to expose a silkscreen and make a sheet of paper off it. I was excited about trying this out, because this could be adapted to so many other ideas!




Ellen, an intern here exposed the screen and got it ready for the experiment





  

The triangles appear!



Making the sheet using a small deckle



 It was almost immediately evident that this wasn't going to be a total success without a lot of fidgeting and tweaking






The finished sheet looked good enough for what it was, but it didn't come close to what I wanted. Only one shape on this sheet came out close to clear. Oh well. I am excited about trying more of this for another project though








Sunday, January 25, 2015

Anatomia Botanica

I finally have time to post some of the images from the finished book. To read about the making-of, click here, here and here. After being in the group show, Finite Landscapes held at the UICB, the book was also shown at the Pyramid Atlantic Book Fair in Maryland, where it won the Maryland Institute College of Art Book Prize.




The deluxe and the standard edition. The deluxe edition has been bound using a modified paper case binding with case paper. The paper for the edition of ten was handmade using hemp and cotton fibers. The standard edition has been printed on Hahnemühle Biblio and bound in a drum leaf binding with a hard case



The deluxe binding comes in clam shell box with a set of three movable prints




 The title page. The flourish under the title has been printed using linoleum reduction




The taxonomy of the Nelumbo nucifera







A detail



 
Nelumbo nucifera text spread, set in Bembo italics and roman

 

Hibiscus rosa-sinensis title page

 

Detail. The scallop pattern has been printed using photo polymer plates

 

 
The taxonomy of the Hibiscus rosa-sinensis







A detail



 
The taxonomy of the Magnolia grandiflora



 




 
A detail




Afterword










Monday, January 19, 2015

Blood Drive

I recently worked on a collaboration with Justin Cox, a poet at the Writer's workshop at the University of Iowa. It didn't take us very long to come up with an idea we both liked and wanted for the poem. I loved working on this broadside after printing the mammoth that was my thesis. This is a reduction linoleum cut with pochoir.