Showing posts with label Artist books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artist books. Show all posts

BOOKMAKING WORKSHOP







QUARTERBOUND BOOKMAKING WORKSHOP

I will guide you step by step to make a unique and beautiful hardback notebook for those treasured notes.

Through this process you will learn basic bookmaking skills and techniques which will start you on your journey into bookmaking into notebooks, folders, albums ... It is also a very useful workshop to get back to basic and pick up some tips on the way.

Book will have 5 signatures of folded good quality laid paper which will be sewn together. We will make our own book cloth with a cotton material of your choice and add a complimentary spine cover and inside endpapers

To book email Kath on thesilverthimble@yahoo.co.uk
or telephone Kath on 07920 760646 or 01653 618672
http://www.thesilverthimble.co.uk

The Silver Thimble Craft Workshops
Station House
Barton Hill
York
YO60 7JX

On FRIDAY, 29TH APRIL 2016, 10 - 4pm
£30,
Specialist equipment available to use and some materials included.
A complete list of materials to bring will be sent to you once you have booked for the workshop.

Tea, coffee and biscuits provided, Please bring you own lunch.



Japanese Accordion Display Books


Japanese Accordion Books, 

to display photos, prints, postcards, 
small sewn projects 
or just to enjoy the gorgeous Japanese materials.









Make your own in my workshops run at 




Fabric covered folder making workshop

Make a beautiful personal folder with traditional bookmaking techniques using your own choice of cotton bookcloth.
Make a small (11x11 inches), medium (13 x 13 inches) or large (15 x 15 inches) folder to keep your patchwork safely flat or your documents, photos, certificates. Line with felt, brushed cotton or paper. The varieties are endless. 






Suitable for beginner and more advance bookmakers.
Make folder with or without flaps according to your skill confidence. 

Location: The Silver Thimble Craft Workshop
Tuesday, 9th of June, 10 am to 4pm
class fee: £30 - Tea, coffee and cake included

booking via info@thesilverthimble.co.uk
or call Kath Allaway on 07920760646 
or contact via facebook event's page


JAPANESE ACCORDION BOOKS

The design for this accordion book was based on an example that a bookmaking enthusiast brought back from Japan. The original was used to display small reproductions of delicate Japanese prints.  We thought it would be wonderful for displaying photographs, your small projects or an array of gorgeous Japanese materials.

Here are some I made earlier:






Make one for yourself or as a present:
I am running a workshop  at The Silver Thimble, near York and Malton, North Yorkshire to make these on the 8th of November, 10  to 4 pm, £30, Some materials included.
Please contact info@thesilverthimble.co.uk to book.

Installation of Monthly Map books

Home from Home Exhibition
Installed the Monthly Map Books today in a Victorian town house where each themed room displays a intriguing variation of artist works related to home and books.


These Monthly Map books are based on a visual source gathered for the Daily Colour Project (Sustaining Systems)  which I did in 2008.  The project was investigating the interaction of art and domestic daily situations.  As an emerging artist I was investigation how to establish an artistic practise and routine, when more everyday essential routines were demanding for my attention.  Through this investigation  it also became apparent that maintaining a daily routine was a low-key but important means of surviving when unpredictable and destabilising events happened.  


Detail from Monthly Map: August.
digital print on paper, thread, hardback book cover.

Also available at the book fair:  Monthly Maps:  September and November.

Invitation for Home to Home Exhibition on Facebook

Home from Home


153 Woodhouse Lane, Leeds
11th - 18th March 2011
Curated by Louise Atkinson
Image by Jacob Schuhle-Lewis

'With ideas ranging from the domestic to displacement, over 80 artists from 7 different countries have contributed to this years Artist Book Collective exhibition around the theme of Home. 153 Woodhouse Lane is the setting for Home from Home, to be shown alongside the 14th Leeds International Artist Book Fair. As a spacious Victorian terrace situated over three floors, it provides the perfect backdrop for this site-specific exhibition.

Artists responded to the brief through exploring and expanding on the book as a time-based medium, whilst incorporating the notion of the Everyday. Traditional book works as well as sculptural objects, text, narrative, video, furniture, audio and performance are represented throughout the show.

The concept of Home evokes various associations, including our experience of domestic spaces in relation to their designated public/private status, as well as the collection and curation of personal possessions within those spaces. Often our sense of self and security is linked to feeling ‘at home’, insinuating that this sensation is not always related to a particular place or building.

At first glance, Home from Home gives an impression of family, refuge and sanctuary, but upon closer inspection, it also begins to uncover associated feelings of anxiety and uncertainty relating to superstition, illness and transience.' Abc Archive, 2011


More Info on ABC Archive

Monthly Map Books

Folding Map (cover not yet present - this is a work in progress)

I am making Monthly Map books for the artist book  genre exhibition 'HOME' at 153 Woodhouse Lane, Leeds that is curated by Louise Atkinson to coincide with the International Artists book Fair in Leeds.  The Exhibition opens on the 11th of March and will be open until the 18th in a large Victorian House opening on  Friday 11th of  March 2011.


A lot of my work is related to intimate and domestic objects so it seems appropriate for this exhibition.   I am working on Monthly Maps.  These books will be based on source material gathered for a daily colour project in 2008 and 2009, where  washing was colour coordinated when hung to dry and photographed.  The source material covers august 2008 to April 2009.  All months haven't been processed yet, but I anticipate making Monthly maps for August, September, November, December and April, with an edition of at least two so one could be on display in the exhibition and others for sale at the fair.  They can be completely opened out and framed if wished.
Detail of sewn pages

Here is August Monthly Map, the first month of the project which started on the 15th of August 2008.
August Monthly Map 

 
Lace effect of sewn pages 

Chicken book, Page by Page


CHICKEN or EGG BOOKS,

Drypoint prints on handmade egg paper.



Edition of 5
Hardback : 1/5, 2/5 and 3/5  - sold
Softback: 4/5 and 5/5 - SOLD


made for the 13th International Artist Book Fair in Leeds,
will also be at the Solihull artist book fair at the Secret Library, Solihull





PAGE BY PAGE:
drypoint on handmade egg paper.














Embedded Strata



I decided to make a hard book cover for this book as the binding was getting loose. The handmade paper is rough and full of interesting residue from the original papers and waste soil from the Hungate Dig, but tears easily. I decided the cover should be reminescent of the boxes in which archaeological artefacts are stored; so I opted for a simple cover of brown wrapping paper.
This is one of the books which will be on show at the 12th International Contemporary Artists'Book Fair at the University of Leeds on 6th and 7th of March. You will be able to leaf through our works at the 'Kruse e Scriven' Display.
.




Artist Book: Embedded Strata


15 x 15 mm, SOLD



I am delighted that my book, Embedded Strata, has been selected to be in the From Book to Book Exhibitions which will take place at Leeds Art Gallery.


the Paper for this book is made out of unwanted material, which carries nonetheless the history of it previous use. The paper base is made out of paper earmarked for recycling from home, office and educational uses. The texture and inclusions of the paper are very tactile and varied. The colour is subtly different in each batch of papers and provided by the 'waste' soil of the different areas of the hungate archaeological dig .

Winding Thread drawings




Installation, Winding thread, 2007
York St John University

Drawing composed of 5 different layers.
watercolour pencil and graphite on translucent paper. pearl head pins




Two hand printed, hand made books
(Ink, thread, translucent paper, watercolour paper and scrim)



The inspiration for my work is drawn from ordinary objects, gestures and glimpses of daily life. The sewing implements I concentrated on belonged to a woman called Frances, who was the great aunt of a friend. These simple sewing materials have little pecuniary value, yet are cherished objects that may be read as indicators of her life and times.

Spanning thousands of years, from the classical Greek to Norse mythology, there are stories concerned with thread and weaving, metaphors for human existence. Famous in western culture is the story of the Fates, referred to as the ‘Wyrd Sisters’ in Anglo-Saxon mythology, who spun the thread of one’s life and measured its extent. Needlework used as a metaphor for social, personal and cultural narrative. Unused bobbins are pristine, full of potential, with the thread still constrained. Needles are tools, life’s lessons; they are sharp but necessary for development. We need fastenings and hooks to hang on to and make bonds in relationships. The hands reference human conscious required to give direction and meaning.

My work as an artist is intimately bound up with my attention toward the tactile, material world; the quality and grain of paper, the scratching of the dry-point surface or the raised edge of a stitched line In making books my intention is that the viewer will share in this tactile experience; they are invited to handle the books, both to experience a deeper physical relationship to the work and to imprint something of themselves upon it leaving unintentional residue which then becomes part of the work’s history, its own life.

Although this work may be read as ‘feminine’ because of its subject matter my hope is that it resists gender specificity. Needlework has always been a process performed by, and of course essential to, both men and women. Not until the creation of the Medieval Guilds was the separation between male commercial and female domestic work begun*.

My intention is that this work should be quiet and attentive, as peaceful and serene as a Dutch interior, a homage to a domestic tranquillity that is the antithesis of the loudness, coarseness, information overload and sensational headlines that characterise much of our current culture; it asks us to retune to a quiet sensitivity that listens to the inner voice of our humanity.
*Rozsika Parker, ‘The Subversive Stitch’, 1984.