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~ Recent Art Projects by Jane Ingram Allen in Hand Papermaking and Environmental Art

Jane Ingram Allen Art Projects

Tag Archives: Jane Ingram Allen

Exhibition Opens in Pt. Reyes Station, CA

04 Tuesday Oct 2022

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climate change, environmental art, Gallery Route One, installation, jami Taback, Jane Ingram Allen, papermaking, printmaking, Pt. Reyes Station, water

“In Deep Water – Rising” an installation about water and climate change utilizing hand papermaking and printmaking by artists Jane Ingram Allen and Jami Taback opens Saturday, Oct. 8, 3-5pm, at Gallery Route One, Point Reyes Station, CA. There will be Artists Talks in the gallery at 3pm. The exhibition remains on view at Gallery Route One’s Project Space through Sunday, Nov. 13, 2022. There will also be closing remarks by the artists at 4pm on Sunday, Nov. 13. Gallery Route One is open 11am to 5pm, Thursday through Monday.

For more information: https://galleryrouteone.org

Here’s a photo of the installation at Gallery Route One, Pt. Reyes Station, CA, taken after installing on Oct. 5.

Jane Ingram Allen and Jami Taback, In Deep Water – Rising, 2022 (detail of installation), 2022, mixed media installation with hand papermaking and printmaking, thread, dye, ink, multiple suspended panels, dimensions variable.

Jane Ingram Allen and Jami Taback, In Deep Water – Rising, 2022, Gallery Route One, view, mixed media installation, hand papermaking, printmaking, thread, burning, multiple suspended panels, each about 1-2 feet wide and 8-10 feet long.

(Photos by Timothy S. Allen, https://allentimphotos2.wordpress.com).

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Jane Ingram Allen Summer Art News

29 Wednesday Jun 2022

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art projects, ecoart, handmade paper, installation art, Jane Ingram Allen, papermaking

Summer art activities include making handmade paper outdoors on my patio and assembling things indoors in my garage studio in Santa Rosa, CA, for upcoming exhibitions and public art projects.

I have been selected for Sonoma Creates Art Surround (https://www.creativesonoma.org/artsurround/) a new public art program that will partner artists with organizations in Santa Rosa and Sonoma County, CA, to create new site-specific artworks in public spaces working with the community. The project offers grants of $1000 to $10,000 to each of the selected artists to do one or more public art projects during the months of July to December of 2022. I should know in a few weeks what organizations I will be working with and where my installations will be sited. I hope to do more eco art installations with handmade paper and seeds in the pulp to change over time and work in harmony with nature. Here is a photos of my installation last year in Steckborn, Switzerland, titled “Living Quilt for Steckborn”.

Jane Ingram Allen, Living Quilt for Steckborn, installed in April 2021 and starting to transform, 8 feet x 10 feet x 1 foot, sponsored by Haus zur Glocke https://www.hauszurglocke.ch/home, Steckborn, Switzerland, handmade paper pulp, dye, seeds for wildflowers, soil, boards.
Jane Ingram Allen, Living Quilt for Steckborn, blooming in September 2021, 8 feet x 10 feet x 1 foot, handmade paper, dye, seeds for wildflowers soil, boards, installed in April 2021, organized by Haus zur Glocke and city of Steckborn, Steckborn, Switzerland.

Check back here soon for updates about the art installations I will be doing in Santa Rosa, California, and Sonoma County, California during the coming months.

Summer Workshops with Jane Ingram Allen in Oregon

Jane’s “Papermaking Around the World” workshops this summer at Sitka Center for Art & Ecology are both full. One session will be August 7 and 8, and another session will be August 9 and 10 at Sitka Center in Otis, Oregon, on the beautiful central Oregon coast. For more information about the programs at Sitka Center for Art & Ecology, see the website at http://www.sitkacenter.org

During these “Papermaking Around the World” workshops participants will be learning to make handmade paper using materials, equipment and techniques from countries around the world, such as Japan, the Philippines, Thailand, Taiwan, Tanzania, Indonesia, Brazil, Nepal and Turkey…all countries where Jane has been an artist in residence. Jane will be teaching more papermaking art workshops in her Santa Rosa, CA, studio during the Fall of 2022. Email her to be put on the email list for workshops and classes in hand papermaking: info@janeingramallen

Continuing work on Collaborative Art Project “In Deep Water“

Jane is continuing to work with printmaker Jami Taback on their “In Deep Water” Project. The installation of “In Deep Water” at Rowan University, Discovery Hall, Glassboro, NJ, is coming down at the end of August 2022. Here is a photo of one part of the multiple panels being created for this installation. Jane and Jami will be creating more handmade paper and printmaking panels for this ongoing installation art project about climate change and water.

Detail of “In Deep Water” panel, one sheet 18″ x 12″, handmade paper, dye, printmaking, ink

The next exhibition of “In Deep Water” will be Oct. 8 – Nov. 10, 2022, at Gallery Route One Project Space, Point Reyes Station, CA. http://www.galleryrouteone.org

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April 23, 2022 Papermaking Workshop in Santa Rosa, CA

07 Monday Mar 2022

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CA, handmade paper, Jane Ingram Allen, papermaking, workshops in Santa Rosa

Announcing another opportunity to learn more about hand papermaking:

Saturday, April 23, 2022

Hand Papermaking Workshop with Jane Ingram Allen in Santa Rosa

5017 Maiden Lane, Santa Rosa, CA 95409

Phone:  857-2344-2432

Email:  info@janeingramallen.com

https://janeingramallen.wordpress.com and www.janeingramallen.com 

EXTREME Hand Papermaking! – Saturday, April 23, 10AM to 4PM

Workshop Fee:  $150 – Includes all materials and use of equipment.  Send check to Jane Ingram Allen, 5017 Maiden Lane, Santa Rosa, CA 95409 or pay with a credit card using Paypal to info@janeingramallen.com

 Due to so many wanting to take the March 19 workshop, I decided to offer it again in April!  Join me in my Santa Rosa studio for some indoor and outdoor EXTREME and Experimental Papermaking using a variety of pulps such as kozo (paper mulberry bark), cotton blue jeans, sisal, flax and abaca as well as at least one plant fiber gathered locally. 

We will do such things as make really big paper using pouring methods, make really thin but strong paper using Japanese techniques, make thick sculptural cast paper, burn handmade paper using a flame retardant, make holes, tear and shred paper, make paper that moves and produces sounds and blend some strange and exotic pulps for special effects.  Come prepared for some extreme experimental papermaking to produce unique handmade paper for artwork of all kinds.  This workshop is suited for beginning and experienced papermakers and promises to challenge you to stretch and expand your ideas about papermaking.  

Class size is limited to 4 people, and all must be vaccinated.  All Covid protocols in effect will be followed. 

Controlled Burning of Handmade Paper
Making BIG paper in Tanzania, at WHAT residency, Arusha
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Participating in Online Forum “What’s Next ? – Learning from Nature during Lockdown”

01 Thursday Oct 2020

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CA, ecoart, environmental art, greener cities, handmade paper, Jane Ingram Allen, nature, sacramento, Santa Rosa, sojourner truth

The international organization for greener cities (The Nature of Cities at http://www.thenatureofcities.com) invited me to contribute an essay and images of my work for the online forum “What’s Next? – Learning from Nature during Lockdown. Here is the link: https://www.thenatureofcities.com/2020/09/30/whats-next-learning-from-nature-during-lockdown/

This photo shows the huge mulberry tree in my front yard that I have used for my hand papermaking art during the pandemic.

Large Mulberry tree used for papermaking located in my front yard, Santa Rosa, California

I was invited for this international forum as a result of being selected for an invited artist-in-residency project at Cour Commune (www.courcommune.org). My residency at Cour Commune in Voulx, is now planned for Spring 2021. I will post more information here soon about my residency in France next year.

I also wanted to let everyone know that my home and studio in Santa Rosa, CA, are okay for now. We are located in an evacuation warning zone for the current wildfires in Sonoma County that affected the northeast section of Santa Rosa. My family and I are all fine, and we are watching the news updates carefully and remain packed and ready to evacuate again if needed. The smoke and ash from the nearby fires make the air outside unsafe and hazardous, and we are staying indoors for now.

I am able to work indoors on art for my upcoming projects in November. My exhibition at Haus zur Glocke in Steckborn, Switzerland (www.hauszurglocke.ch) opens on November 25, 2020. I am creating a “Lake Constance Site Map” now with internet resources and a few things that artist friends in Switzerland, Germany and Austria have mailed to me here in California. Lake Constance is a large lake in Europe that lies between Switzerland, Germany and Austria. Here is a photo of my Lake Constance handmade paper artwork in progress:

Lake Constance Site Map (in progress)

I will post more about the exhibition at Haus zur Glocke and my “Lake Constance Site Map” soon. The exhibition at Haus ur Glocke titled “Labor-Natur” will feature artworks by 3 artists who use nature as a laboratory to create their art. I will be showing a selection of my handmade paper site maps that are created from plant materials collected at each site. The Lake Constance Site Map is the first one I have made remotely since I was not able to go to Switzerland this year because of the pandemic.

I will also be working in my Santa Rosa studio during October and November to create another “living quilt” installation for the City of Sacramento’s artist in residency program. I will be making some live Zoom programs to show how the handmade paper quilt with seeds for wildflowers in the pulp is designed and made. I will go to Sacramento for one week in November to install my art project “Living Quilt for Sojourner Truth” at Sojourner Truth Community Garden in the Pocket-Greenhaven area of Sacramento, California.

This photo shows one square of the “Living Quilt for Sojourner Truth”.

one quilt square for my “Living Quilt for Sojourner Truth” installation in Sacramento, CA

I am using the North Star quilt pattern to refer to how quilts may have been used to show escaping slaves the direction north to freedom. Sojourner Truth was a former slave and famous as a leader in the abolitionist and women’s suffrage movements. Keep watching this Blog to see more about my public art project in Sacramento.

Wishing everyone good health and good air to breathe!

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Venturing Out – My Art Activities in September 2020 and Beyond

05 Saturday Sep 2020

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California art, environmental art, handmade paper, Jane Ingram Allen, online exhibitions, papermaking, public art, Santa Rosa

Here are some of the art projects I am currently participating in and some that are coming up soon, as we venture forth from the pandemic and quarantine.

Hello World is an international online art exhibition and art project by TransCultural Exchange in Boston, MA. This international art project was conceived and curated by artist/curator Mary Sherman. This pandemic art project was conceived as a way to bring together artists from various countries around the world to share what they are doing and continue international cultural exchange travel during this time of the pandemic. This art project will be online indefinitely, and here is a link to my contribution for this project (click on the far-right photo in the second line):
https://transculturalexchange.org/activities/hw/projects.htm




California Petals is a public art installation I created in August 2020 for a downtown storefront window in Santa Rosa, CA, and it can be viewed at any time from now to October 15, 2020. My installation is part of the Santa Rosa Downtown Chamber’s “Open and Out” program of cultural activities in the downtown area to encourage people to stroll around in the “pedestrians only” blocks of Fourth Street where many restaurants and stores are now open for outdoor dining and limited in-person shopping. My art installation is in a vacant storefront window at 620 Fourth Street, and it consists of many giant handmade paper flower petals with seeds for California wildflowers in the pulp. After the installation comes down on October 15, I plan to “plant” these petals in Santa Rosa so that they will change over time, sprout and bloom in colorful wildflowers. Here is a link to my Blog that has more information about “California Petals”: https://www.openandoutsr.com/art/art1-cbcmw

public art installation California Petals in downtown Santa Rosa, CA

Falling Open: On & Off the Page, Themes of Our Time is a group exhibition at Gallery Route One, Point Reyes Station, CA, that will be online as well as open for appointment viewing from September 18 to October 15, 2020. This is an invitational exhibition of artworks selected by curator Renee Owen that includes handmade artist books, installations and other works that relate to current environmental, social and pandemic issues. For this exhibition I will be showing a new work titled “Daily Scrolls” created during my first months of pandemic quarantine. This artwork has 91 handmade paper scrolls each with unique text and images that reflect my daily thoughts and experiences during this time. For more information about this exhibition: https://galleryrouteone.org/upcoming-events/

Daily Scrolls paper sculpture

Upcoming Art Projects and Activities

2020 Lucid Art Foundation Alumni Exhibition is an online exhibition of selected works by past artists in residence at the Lucid Art Foundation in Inverness, CA. I was an artist in residence at the Lucid Art Foundation in 2013, and for this exhibition one handmade paper sculpture I made during my 2013 residency and another handmade paper sculpture created this year will be included. The first piece made in 2013 is titled “Feather Duster” and makes use of branches from a local olive tree and handmade paper “feathers” I created from local plants. My other paper sculpture in this exhibition created in 2020 is titled “Paper Poppy” and depicts a giant California golden poppy like those blooming in my yard during the pandemic this Spring. Here is a link to this online exhibition: http://www.lucidart.org/exhibitions#current-exhibitions

Paper Poppy

Living Quilt for Sojourner Truth, Artist in Residency Project, Sacramento, CA is a public art project that will be completed in November 2020 at the Sojourner Truth Community Garden, Sacramento, CA. I was selected for the City of Sacramento’s Artist in Residency Program to create a site-specific art installation at a community garden in the Pocket-Greenhaven area of Sacramento. For this project I had planned public participation activities and workshops, but this has not been possible because of the pandemic. I will create the handmade paper “quilt” in a traditional “North Star” pattern with seeds in the pulp and bring it to Sacramento in November to create a “bed” for the “quilt” and install it at the Sojourner Truth Community Garden where it will transform over time. I will be making Zoom programs for online public participation. For information about the City of Sacramento Artist in Residency program: https://arts.cityofsacramento.org/Programs/Sacramento-AIR See my Blog for updates about this project and the upcoming Zoom programs: https://janeingramallen.wordpress.com

quilt block in “North Star” pattern for Living Quilt for Sojourner Truth in Sacramento, CA

Labor Natur, Haus zur Glocke, Steckborn, Switzerland is an exhibition curated by Judit Villager of works by three international artists who explore connections between art and science and use nature as a laboratory. This exhibition is open to the public in Switzerland from November 21, to December 12, 2020. For this exhibition I will be shipping some of my handmade paper “site maps” made in residencies around the world to Switzerland and also creating a new “site map” of the Lake Constance area encompassing Switzerland, Germany and Austria in my Santa Rosa, California, studio. I am doing online research gathering photos and information about plants that are common to northern California and the Steckborn area. Also, Judit Villager is sending me some materials by mail from Switzerland that I can put into the mixed media handmade paper site map. I hope to be able to travel to Switzerland in Spring 2021 for an artist in residency public art project at Haus zur Glocke. For more information about this exhibition in German only: https://www.hauszurglocke.ch/agenda/ausstellung//labor-natur1/
Or see this link in English at my Blog: https://janeingramallen.wordpress.com

Lake Constance Site Map in progress

Papermaking Art Workshops and art consulting sessions in my new Santa Rosa studio will be starting again in 2021. Contact me at info@janeingramallen.com to get the latest information about upcoming classes and individual consulting appointment.

papermaking in my Santa Rosa studio – creating “California Petals”

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Slide Show of “Living Quilt for Santa Rosa” Changing Over Time

21 Friday Jun 2019

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art installation, CA, handmade paper, Jane Ingram Allen, Santa Rosa, sculpture installation, seeds, soil, wildfire response, wildflowers

 

Here is a link to the slide show showing the transformation of my installation “Living Quilt for Santa Rosa” from its installation on Nov. 25, 2018 to blooming wildflowers in April, May and June 2019: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6rfH104j92o

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“Guns Into Flowers” Project installed on March 16, 2019, at South Natomas Community Center Park, Sacramento, CA

19 Tuesday Mar 2019

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handmade paper, Jane Ingram Allen, natomas charter school, sacramento, south natomas community center, wildflowers

Detail of installing first of 20 squares for the Guns into Flowers handmade paper quilt with seeds for wildflowers in the pulp.

These photos are of the installation ceremony on Saturday, March 16, 2019 at South Natomas Community Center Park, Sacramento, CA. Many people came out to see the installation and support this project that focused on raising awareness about the issue of gun violence. The Guns into Flowers “quilt” will dissolve into compost over time and the wildflower seeds in the handmade paper pulp will sprout and grow into a living blooming bed of wildflowers in the same colors and pattern, thus transforming the “guns into flowers”.

Laying down the Guns into Flowers Quilt on the prepared “bed”.

Natomas Charter School visual arts students laying down the quilt squares and staking them to the ground with bamboo skewers having a wine cork on top.

Natomas Charter School art teachers Chelsea Greninger and Jim Vetter and school founder and executive director Dr. Ting Sun speaking at the installation ceremony for the “Guns Into Flowers” art project in Sacramento, CA

Detail showing two students installing a Guns into Flowers handmade paper quilt square.

Natomas Charter School visual arts students, principal and art teachers with the artist Jane Ingram Allen after the installation is completed.

Students and teachers spoke at the installation ceremony to tell about their experience of working on the Guns into Flowers art project.

Artist Jane Ingram Allen directs the students in laying down the Guns into Flowers handmade paper quilt on the prepared “bed”

The installation of the “Guns into Flowers” handmade paper quilt with seeds for wildflowers in the paper pulp was done with the participation of the visual arts students of Natomas Charter School. The students were involved in the whole process of creating a public art installation in a city park at the South Natomas Community Center. The Guns into Flowers art project was created during a three-week artist in residency at Natomas Charter School working with the students to make the handmade paper quilt and create a “flower bed” with a headboard and footboard woven of local branches. The quilt was installed in a public ceremony with students laying down the 20 squares and borders to form the quilt on the 8 feet x 10 feet “bed”.

Thanks to all the students and teachers at Natomas Charter School Performing and Fine Arts Academy for their participation in this project and to our other sponsors: Natomas Arts & Education Foundation, N Magazine, City of Sacramento, Edward L. Anderson Jr. Foundation and The Arts Engagement Foundation of Kansas City. It was a great experience working on this project with the students to create a public art installation in Sacramento.
Photos of the installation are by Timothy S. Allen (allentimphotos2.wordpress.com).

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Happy Holidays and Happy New Year!

23 Saturday Dec 2017

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happy holidays, Happy New Year, Jane Ingram Allen

Happy Holidays!
Happy New Year!
from Jane Ingram Allen
2017 was an eventful and artful year. At the beginning of the year I curated the environmental art projects I do each year in Taiwan. Cheng Long Wetlands International Environmental Art Project took place during April and May in Yunlin County, Taiwan.

Installation “Microclimatic Life-line” by Annechien Meier and Gert-Jan Gerlach of the Netherlands for the 2017 Cheng Long Art Project

The National Museum of Marine Science International Environmental Art Project in Keelung, Taiwan, was held from June to September 2017.
In April and May I created an artwork to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Fulbright Foundation in Taiwan, that was installed at the Foundation’s Taipei headquarters in June.

I created this mixed media handmade paper artwork to celebrate 60 Years of US-Taiwan Fulbright Foundation Cultural Exchanges

In August 2017 I was an artist-in- residence in Newnan, GA with an award from Newnan Art Rez to create an environmental artwork in a city park.

“Living Quilt for Newnan” was installed on August 31, 2017

In October I opened my new art studio at Studio Santa Rosa, Santa Rosa, CA, after moving my art storage from New York State to Santa Rosa. I participated in an Open Studio the first weekend in November and had visitors making handmade paper.

Papermaking activity in my new Santa Rosa studio

In December I have been making a new handmade paper quilt with the “flying geese” pattern that has seeds for wildflowers in the pulp. I hope to plant this quilt and make another “flower bed” in early 2018 to memorialize the terrible October wildfires that destroyed so many homes and businesses in Santa Rosa. The transformation of the handmade paper quilt into a bed of blooming wildflowers reminds us of the regenerative power of nature and creates an evolving living artwork.

“Living Quilt for Newnan” installed on 8/31/2017; detail of flowers blooming on 11/3/2017

Thank you for your friendship and support this year. May all of you have a happy, healthy and peaceful 2018!

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Going to Turkey – Fulbright grant art project

23 Friday Oct 2015

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artist-in-residency, Fulbright grant, handmade paper, installation, Izmir, Jane Ingram Allen, papermaking, timothy s. allen, Turkey

I am happy to announce that I have received a Fulbright Specialist Grant for an art project in Turkey at Ege University, Museum of Paper and Book Arts, Izmir, Turkey.
I will be flying to Turkey on November 18, 2015 and return to San Francisco on December 16, 2015. For the first week I will be in Istanbul touring some of the sites and seeing art museums and galleries on my own, and then going to Izmir on November 25 for the start of my Fulbright grant project.

Here is a photo showing the outside of the Museum of Paper & Book Arts at Ege University, Izmir, Turkey, and a group of visiting students.

paper & book arts museum Izmir

During the 20-day Fulbright Specialist grant in Izmir, I will be exploring the plants around Izmir to use for my papermaking art and creating some new artworks using local materials and inspired by the place. I will also teach papermaking workshops at the Ege Univerisity Musuem of Paper and Book Arts and consult with the Museum and the university about curriculum in paper arts and environmental art.  I will also help them to set up a papermaking studio or workshop at the Museum.  I will also have an exhibition of my handmade paper artworks at EgeArt 2015, an international art festival held in Izmir from Dec. 11-13, 2015.  My exhibition will include some of the handmade paper “site maps” I have created in other residencies around the world, including during my 2004 and 2005 Fulbright grant projects in Taiwan and a 2010 artist in residency project in Bali, Indonesia.  Here are some photos of a Taiwan Site Map and a Bali Site Map.

Taiwan site map floral abundance Bali site map front 1

I know the Paper & Book Arts Museum in Turkey through my international art project “One World Many Papers” that was a collaborative paper artwork I created with artists from around the world.  I asked the participating artists to send me a sheet of paper they made to represent their country and then I joined all the sheets of paper together to make a large map of the world having no political borders.  The finished piece was donated to the Paper & Book Arts Museum in Turkey at Ege Univeristy, Izmir, in 2011, shortly after the museum opened.  Before getting its permanent home in Turkey, this artwork was seen in exhibitions around the world in 2009 and 2010.  Here is a photo of the finished artwork.  For more information about my “One World – Many papers Project” please visit my other Blog: http://www.janeingramallenart.blogspot.com

world-side-small map-side-email artistside-email

I will be posting on this WordPress Blog more about the work I do in Izmir.  Please check back later in November for photos of the places I see and the artwork I make during this art project in Turkey. My husband Timothy S. Allen is going with me to Turkey, and he will be taking lots of photos to document my work and also photos of our experiences in Turkey. His Blog is at http://allentimphotos2.wordpress.com

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Artist in Residency in Hua Yuan Village, Hsinchu County, Taiwan – May 25-29, 2014

09 Monday Jun 2014

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aboriginals in Taiwan, Hsinchu County, Hua Yuan, Jane Ingram Allen, papermaking, Pith Paper, Site Map, Tetrapanax papyrifer

Jane Ingram Allen – Artist in Residency Project at Hua Yuan Elementary School, Hua Yuan Village, Wufeng Township, Hsinchu County Taiwan

Dates:  May 25 – May 29, 2014

This photo shows my finished Hua Yuan Site Map artwork that was created during the residency using local plants to make the handmade paper and thread created from local plants.

Image

HuaYuan Village is in rural Wufeng Township in the mountainous southern part of Hsinchu County, Taiwan. The area is inhabited mostly by aboriginal peoples of the Taiya tribe, and the elementary school has become a sort of cultural center for the community. The school has about 37 students in grades one through 6, and the kindergarten has about 20 students. I worked there for 4 days as an artist in residence with sponsorship by the school and the forestry bureau and the Taiwan Education Bureau and Foreign Affairs Bureau. My project was to teach the students and some local adult volunteers about hand papermaking using local plant materials and create a Huayuan Site Map that would celebrate the Tong Cao or the pith paper plant for which this area is known. Tong Cao or pith paper is made from the inner stem or pith of the plant Tetrapanax papyrifer.   The aboriginal people in this area grew the plant in small farms during the days of the Japanese occupation of Taiwan, and the growing and preparing of this plant for pith paper was a major industry for Hsinchu in this time period, though now it has almost disappeared.   Efforts are now being made to revive interest in this plant and its use for crafts such as making artificial flowers and small paintings, and to encourage the local people to grow it again and preserve the culture and heritage of this village.  This is a photo of the pith paper plant in Hua Yuan village.

Image

 

My work with handmade paper from the plants of Taiwan has been ongoing since 2004 when I first came to Taiwan with a Fulbright grant.   During my two years on the Fulbright grant I traveled to 14 different areas of Taiwan and made handmade paper for my artwork from 135 different plants…but I did not go to Hsinchu. I became familiar with the pith paper plant, but did not have a chance to try it for papermaking. I had experimented with the pith paper for making contemporary artworks in 2010-13 and joined with other Taiwanese nature educators and craftsmen and some foreign artists, papermakers, historians and conservators to start a movement to revive the cultivation and culture of this plant. I published an article about the pith paper revival in Taiwan in the magazine Hand Papermaking in Summer 2013 (http://magazine.handpapermaking.org/previous.htm).

 

During this artist in residency in Hua Yuan village I worked at the school with some local volunteers and the school children to make handmade paper from local plants: paper mulberry bark, Japanese silvergrass leaves and the bark and leaves of the pith paper plant (Tetrapanax papyrifer or Tong Cao ). The local mulberry bark was a great source of fiber for handmade paper and so was the Japanese silvergrass, but the pith paper outer bark and leaves did not yield any fiber that would make paper. However, this material did work well to make an interesting handmade paper when some mulberry bark pulp and Japanese silvergrass pulp were added with the Pith Paper plant material in the vat. The resulting mixed pulp yielded handmade paper with a unique dark color and interesting rough texture, and I used this paper and the mulberry bark and silvergrass paper to create the Huayuan Site Map artwork.

 

My Huayuan Site Map artwork was composed with sheets of A-4 size handmade paper that I made in my modified Asian technique. The handmade paper sheets were joined with thread made from local plant fibers mixed with some common cotton sewing thread. The local plants used for thread were Boehmeria nivea (Ramie or China grass) and Alpinia zerumbet (Shell Ginger). The stems of these plants yield great fiber for thread and rope. During my residency one of the local men brought his 80-year old mother to the school to show us how to make the thread from the inner bark of stems from the Bohermeria nivea plant.  Here is a photo of the aboriginal woman in Hua Yuan taking the outer skin of the Ramie plant to make thread.  She used a split bamboo piece to scrape the bark and leave only the plant fiber for the thread.

woman separating bark from stem for thread

I made my HuaYuan Site Map in the shape of the Pith Paper plant leaf. This plant has a huge multi-lobed leaf, and it is up to about 2 feet in size. On one side of my site map I created a map of the area showing the two intersecting rivers and the roads, village houses, school and other important buildings such as the 7 churches. Many sheets of handmade paper created from local plant materials by me, the school children and volunteers were used to create this artwork. On the other side of my site map I included collaged photos of some of the local sites along with painted images representing the local culture. The finished site map was donated to the school and hung for public display in the school.

Jane working on Tung Chou site map

 

During the residency I taught the local volunteers, teachers and students how to make paper from the local plant materials, and they are planning to continue with the hand papermaking in Hua Yuan village.   Although thisImage residency was short, I feel it was very successful in reviving some interest in the pith paper plant and local culture, and it introduced them to another craft (hand papermaking) that can make good use of local natural materials in a sustainable way that will not harm the environment. This is a beautiful natural area of Taiwan with clean air and pure water and has much potential for eco-tourism and introducing people to tribal cultures and raising environmental awareness.  ImageImageImageImageImageImage

 

Photos on this Blog are by Timothy S. Allen (http://allentimphotos2.wordpress.com)

 

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