Posts Tagged ‘roadtrip’

thank you Marcia Schultz and Mel Potter!

Friday, August 19th, 2011

These two awesome day sponsors sent in their donations while we were on the road and didn’t pick any particular city. So I chose the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina, outside of Penland, for Marcia (Matt’s stepmom–Hi Marcia!)

blue ridge mountains

We were lucky enough to host Marcia and Matt’s dad, Mike, for a few days last week, so I didn’t have a chance to post this drawing before then, but I hope y’all enjoy it!

My last-but-definitely-not-least sponsor is Mel Potter, my wonderful papermaking teacher and advisor at Columbia College. Again, Mel didn’t chose a particular city, so I picked an artifact from the Robert C Williams papermaking museum in Atlanta: a Dard Hunter watermark.

Dard Hunter watermark

like a real watermark, it was a bit hard to photograph (I used metallic ink–as close as I could think of to “draw” a watermark), but I think I did pretty alright!
Mel, thank you so much, and I dearly look forward to working with you this fall! :)

& everyone else:

I’m contacting local places now, and hopefully will have a few more book & paper & community art places to showcase here. hooray! :)

trip wrap up & other thoughts

Thursday, August 11th, 2011

I know this is a little overdue–we arrived home to Chicago back on August 1st, but we also brought back traveling colds (blegh) and a cat (hooray!) and so I’ve been occupied.

And, well, there’s just a lot to sort through. We met over fifty people in twenty-two different cities in five weeks. I’ll let that sink in for a minute, because even though it happened to me, it still blows my mind every time I think of it.

some of the wonderful people on our journey

I saw both more and less than I was hoping to: less, because of a blasted heat wave while we were in NYC, Phila, DC, and Roanoke (bah!); more, because people were willing to show us everything they had to offer.
In this way, I also learned both more and less about the ideas of making+giving+community than I set out to find: less, in that I didn’t ask as many specific questions as I wanted (and I had a LOT! but time constraints)… and more, in that more ideas and connections popped up during this trip than even I ever expected.

 

This was one of the major reasons for this trip–seeing first hand how the book arts world functions and communicates is a valuable lesson in how it builds community. Another major reason, though, was how generosity functions for and within a community, and on that aspect I have been absolutely blown away.

When I first planned this trip, I sent out an email asking for suggestions, expecting that I would then have to contact the people and places I wanted to see. Graciously people started offering tours and sending out invitations before I ever had a chance to contact them first! I actually ended up planning the trip about those who had invited me to see them (with a few exceptions), and I had received an invitation for almost every relevant place along our route. (I, in fact, received more invitations than we could ever visit in five weeks, and those who we did get to see realize what a tight schedule we were already on!)

I also had mentioned in the first outgoing email that we were planning on couchsurfing. While I intended to utilize the couchsurfing.com website, we instead ended up with an outpouring of offers to let us stay. Consider that this meant ten people who had never met us let both Matt and I stay in their house — sometimes for multiple days! — just based on the understanding that we were visiting book arts and community art centers.

I saw more wonderful places, met more fascinating people, and learned more about the community than I thought I could–and I set out with high expectations. I collected twenty-two hours of recordings about these people and centers, over a thousand photos, and a book full of notes and ideas.

This is fascinating to you I’m sure, but it doesn’t answer what most people have been curious about.
What in the world am I going to do with all of this information?

studios, workspaces, & prints

While I’m sure that there are many fruits of this labor that will take a long time to reveal themselves, the biggest and most immediate benefit is that this trip was the beginning stages of my thesis exploration into how making, giving, and community interact. This (as you may remember) was my plan all along, so now that I’ve experienced the generosity of this community on many levels, it’s my turn to make a gift for everyone who participated. I believe most of us understand the use of physical objects as reminders of our relationships to others — touchstones, in a way — and letters and mementos gain an additional importance when they are handmade. These gifts will only be small tokens of my appreciation for all the help given to me, but I believe the handmade gift is a vital element of “keeping in touch” with such a wonderful group of people.

Once that is completed, the next step is more obvious: I intend to make a book of the trip and the resulting connections and communications made. As it’s a next step in thesis project, this isn’t solidified yet, but more will be available about it as it develops.

I look forward to staying in contact with y’all and watching how our ties strengthen. The journey has only begun!

last but not least: Green Pea Press, Huntsville, AL

Saturday, August 6th, 2011

In some sense, a large part of my search for community was to find other places like Lowe Mill out there. Lowe Mill is a volunteer and community focused arts & entertainment center in my hometown of Huntsville, AL.

Lowe Mill

Local biotech research guru Jim Hudson bought the building in 2001 and has been fostering it into place that it is today: three floors of arts studios, crafts, performance spaces, clothing stores, local cafes, a record shop, a free-booth art market, and filled to the brim with wonderful folk. My first interaction with Lowe Mill was during a party in 2002, but I started returning more frequently in the summer of 2008, when it just had the second floor occupied with Flying Monkey Arts. For someone interested in the craftier, funkier side of art, this place was perfect for me. I set up a table every weekend for over a year, so I really got to know the hands-on experience of what it means to pass your art directly to your audience.

I could talk about this place forever, and how it influenced and shaped my interest in craft and community, but for now, I’d like to talk about one place in particular.

in this humble corner...


prints on display, with Matt peeking through


Green Pea Press!

Green Pea Press is a community printmaking shop and one of the newest additions to Lowe Mill. It just celebrated its six-month birthday with one of the most capable and talented people I know at its helm, Rachel Lackey:

Rachel and her charming dimples, and Green Pea Press

Y’all, it’s no lie to say that Rachel is definitely ahead of her time. She’s the first person I knew to actually make paper herself, was the teaching assistant for my first book arts class, and now she’s gone and opened a community printmaking shop that hopes to expand into book arts and papermaking.

Oh, and she’s raising her super-cool son, River, too. Believe it, this lady is seriously rockin’ it.

former classmate David Reimer's bear woodcut over the screenprinting station

Inspired by places like Chicago’s own Spudnik Press and realizing that Huntsville needed its own place for printmakers and other artists to get their press-time in, and Green Pea Press was born. Offering screenprinting, etching, block, and letterpress printing classes for both kids and adults, Green Pea Press has a bit of something for everyone and is eager to share the fine art of printmaking to a larger crowd.

prints for sale over the etching press

Rachel noted that the community of Lowe Mill has been really supportive, knowing how much they needed this place available to the local printmakers. It also brings in more people to the Mill who aren’t interested in permanently renting their own studio space there but still want to be able to work alongside other artists.

Matt and I even took a DIY-printing/Build-your-own-screen class there this past May:

My friend L, Matt, Brian, and myself

We had a ton of fun and we’ll surely be back, because we look forward to watching Green Pea Press continue to grow!

Best of luck Rachel–love you and hope to see you soon. :)