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Tag Archives: papermaking

Going to Turkey – Fulbright grant art project

23 Friday Oct 2015

Posted by janeingramallen in Uncategorized

≈ 12 Comments

Tags

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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More about Jane Ingram Allen’s Artist in Residency at Fire Island National Seashore

21 Monday Sep 2015

Posted by janeingramallen in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

artist-in-residency, Fire Island National Seashore, handmade paper, papermaking, plants for papermaking

During my two-week artist in residency at Fire Island National Seashore from Sept. 5 to Sept. 19, 2015, I lived and worked at Watch Hill near the Watch Hill Ferry Station in Staff House #8. My husband Timothy S. Allen was able to join me for the residency, and Tim took many photographs of my process and the work I did at Fire Island. This was my first time to visit Fire Island, and I was inspired by the beauty of the place and its unique ecology. What impressed me most is that it is a natural area and a wilderness yet so close to New York City. This is one of most heavily populated regions in the world, yet Fire Island National Seashore offers a great nature experience with no cars, no restaurants, few stores and not so many people. It has an abundance of wildlife including many different plants…also many mosquitoes and deer ticks and lots of poison ivy that make gathering plant materials challenging!

Jane picking sea grass

At Watch Hill there are usually only a few campers and boaters and day trippers who come over on the ferry from Patchogue during the weekends. My residency on Fire Island started on Saturday of Labor Day weekend, and it was very crowded and bustling with many boats, campers, and those who came for the holiday to enjoy the beautiful beach and the great sunny weather. After Labor Day things definitely were different and much quieter. There is ferry service to Fire Island Watch Hill Station on weekends until October, and the snack shop and store is open also on weekends. We brought all of our food and personal needs with us on the ferry when we came over from Patchogue, Long Island. I also had to bring everything I would need to do my artwork in the suitcase with me from California.

jane making paper at Fire Island

 

Fortunately I have an artist friend, Marcia Widenor, who lives in Sea Cliff on Long Island, and she helped me get together the things I would need for the residency. She let us borrow some sheets and towels and also buckets, plastic bins and stainless steel cooking pots. I brought all the other necessary items for hand papermaking in my suitcase. I am used to setting up a papermaking studio with minimal equipment and supplies and using what I find on site. I did bring in my suitcase a blender and a wooden hammer and some powdered formation aid, a few moulds and deckles, felts and non-woven interfacing as well as some miscellaneous art materials.

Cooking sea grass

 

My plan for Fire Island was to make handmade paper for my artwork from the local plant waste materials, harvesting leaves and bark in a sustainable way so as not to harm any living plants. I used four plants that I collected and prepared on Fire Island. The vegetation for papermaking at Watch Hill is very limited, and I could find no trees that I could get the bark from to make paper.  I did find many long leafed beach and marsh plants and was able to use the leaf plant fibers. The most abundant plant is Phragmites australis, or common reed, that is considered invasive.   For my handmade paper, I used Phragmites, beach grass, Iris leaves and eel grass (seaweed). In this book I have outlined the recipes for making paper from each of these plants and included a sample of the handmade paper for that plant.

Jane making Phragmites paper samples.

 

For one artwork I made on Fire Island I decided to try sand casting with handmade paper, placing sheets of the wet handmade paper created with local plants on the sand to dry. The beach at Fire Island National Seashore has beautiful almost white sand. I was also influenced by reading about the effects of Hurricane Sandy on Fire Island and how the shape of the island is constantly changing with shifting sands and changing ocean conditions.   For the sand cast handmade paper, I made the sand wet and sculpted it to form dunes and added bits of the local plants in the sand. Then I placed my handmade paper on the shaped sand to dry. When the paper was dry I removed the handmade paper and dusted off the loose sand. Then I reshaped the sand for the next piece. Each sand casting was about 18 inches long and 12 inches high. For creating a Fire Island Site Map, I joined the pieces in a long curving shape with natural thread and used acrylic matte gel as glue. The total piece is about 18 feet long and 12 inches high and has a variable thickness from 1 inch to 4 inches. I plan to suspend this work from the ceiling near a long wall for an installation. It can also curve around a corner or hang out in space. It folds up at the thread for easy transport and storage, so I am able to bring it with me for later exhibitions.

_MG_32382_MG_32393_MG_32404_MG_32425_MG_32447_MG_32461Jane working on site mapsand dunes 2 piecessite map detail

 

The many birds I encountered on the beach at Fire Island National Seashore inspired another artwork I created during the residency. I learned that the piping plover, an endangered species, nests near Watch Hill. I made a stencil in the shape of the piping plover with buttercut material on one of the small moulds I brought. I saw many plovers on the beach at Watch Hill, and one day a small flock of piping plovers came swooping in to feed near the water line as I was walking along the beach. These small birds really do make “piping” noises. I created two suspended “piping plover” artworks (one piece has 15 plovers in the flock and the other has 9 plovers). The handmade paper plover shapes are joined together with natural threads and I used Phragmites plumes, feathers collected on the beach and some seaweed (eel grass) to add details in the handmade paper birds. These artworks will hang in front of windows or from the ceiling with light coming through the thin Asian-style handmade paper.

 

Jane peeling birds off

Jane standing in front of hanging birds plovers pano

 

I also created other pieces of handmade paper from local plants during the time at Fire Island, and I plan to continue working with them when I am back at my home in Santa Rosa, California. This residency was a great experience for me, and I enjoyed very much the time to experiment and work with new and different plant fibers. It was also a great chance to be inspired by a beautiful national park area and a wilderness so close to New York City.  I would like to thank the Fire Island National Seashore staff for all of their help, especially Interpretive Specialist/Park Ranger Kristin Santos and coordinator of the Fire Island National Seashore Artist-in-Residency program, Dawn Lee.

_MG_40571

The photos of the plants and of my process were taken by my husband Timothy S. Allen. You can see more photos of my previous residencies and other artworks at my website:  http://www.janeingramallen.com

Tim’s photo blog at http://allentimphotos2.wordpress.com also has other photos from our time at Fire Island National Seashore.

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Jane Ingram Allen’s Fire Island National Seashore Artist in Residency Public Program, Sat., Sept. 12. 2015

09 Wednesday Sep 2015

Posted by janeingramallen in Uncategorized

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artist-in-residency, Fire Island, Fire Island National Seashore, local plants, Long Island, papermaking, Watch Hill Visitor Center

Hello everyone,

You are all invited to come visit me at Fire Island National Seashore this Saturday, Sept. 19, 11AM to 4 PM for a Papermaking Demonstration and public activities.Fire_Island-NY-USA-Location_Map-01

The program is free and open to all. To get here, take the ferry (www.davisparkferry.com) from Patchogue, NY to Watch Hill on Fire Island.  At the Watch Hill Ferry station and the Watch Hill Visitor Center, ask for directions to the Watch Hill Dune Station where you can see my papermaking art going on Saturday from 11 – 4 PM.

I am an artist in residence at Fire Island National Seashore from Sept. 15 – 19, and I am creating new artworks inspired by this beautiful place using local natural materials to make handmade paper. I have already made some paper for my work from local beach grass and Phragmites, and today I am trying some seaweed collected on the beach.

Jane and blue bucket

Hope to see you at the public program on Saturday, Sept. 12, 11AM to 4PM at the Watch Hill Dune Station, Watch Hill Visitor Center, Fire Island, NY. If you want to come visit on any other days before Sept. 19, you are also welcome.  Please contact me by email at info@janeingramallen.com

This photo is some pieces of handmade paper created with sand casting…the pulp is from beach grass and sand of course collected on the beach at Watch Hill.

sand dune paper

Keep checking this Blog for more photos of the residency at Fire Island National Seashore.  Photos are by my husband Timothy S. Allen, who is enjoying Fire Island with me at this residency.

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Artist in Residency at Fire Island National Seashore, NY

24 Monday Aug 2015

Posted by janeingramallen in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

artist-in-residency, Fire Island National Seashore, Long Island, papermaking, plants for papermaking

Fire_Island-NY-USA-Location_Map-01

From Sept. 5 – Sept. 19, 2015, I will be an artist in residence at Fire Island National Seashore http://www.nps.gov/fiis/index.htm
Fire Island is a long barrier island off the southern coast of Long Island, and this year celebrating its 50th year as a national park. During my two weeks on Fire Island I will be exploring the plant waste materials and creating new mixed media handmade paper artworks. Keep watching here for photos of my Fire Island residency.

peeling-mulberry-bark-large

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

09 Monday Jun 2014

Posted by janeingramallen in Uncategorized

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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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Making Trees

13 Friday Dec 2013

Posted by janeingramallen in Uncategorized

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Tags

installation, Oregon, papermaking, pulp, sculpture, Sitka Center for Art & Ecology, Sitka Spruce, trees

Image

During my artist in residency at Sitka Center for Art & Ecology from Oct. 16, 2013 – January 10, 2014, one of the things I have been working on is a multi-part installation of suspended handmade paper sculptures inspired by the tall Sitka Spruce trees in the area.  We took a trip up into the national forest land nearby and saw a whole forest of the tall evergreen trees, and the atmosphere was very special.  We were told that these trees came back after a big fire in the 1960s that destroyed most of the trees.  It is a wonderful place, and I wanted to create an installation of many trees that would be made from the materials of the place.  The handmade paper is made from Sitka Spruce bark collected there and prepared at the Sitka Center studio where I am working now.  The bark from these trees is easy to collect from the ground around the trees because chunks of bark fall off from the birds or other animals or the tree just shedding.  I also found one tree nearby that had been trimmed and was able to collect some bark there.  The other pulp used for these trees is from the marsh or wetlands in the Salmon River Estuary that is nearby the Sitka Center.  The plant I used is the Sitka Sedge, and I collected some leaves from this sedge and prepared it into pulp.  When I cooked and beat this one to a pulp, I was so excited that it was a beautiful green color that looked just like the moss growing on the Sitka Spruce trees.  Even thought the pulp dries to a lighter tan color it is still a good contrast to the very dark rich brown of the Sitka Spruce pulp.  These photos were taken by Timothy S. Allen and one shows me making a tree in the Boyden Studio space at the Sitka Center, and the other photo shows a couple of them hanging in the space.  I plan to keep making more trees and make as many as I can during the residency and then find a place to install them for an exhibition.

Image

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7 Plants for Papermaking used in the Point Reyes Art Project

31 Thursday Oct 2013

Posted by janeingramallen in Uncategorized

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art project, Gallery Route One, Lucid Art Foundation, papermaking, plants for papermaking, Point Reyes, Point Reyes Station, Public Art Project, West Marin Community Foundation, West Marin School

In my “For the Birds” public art project and residency at Point Reyes, CA, working with children in West Marin School and supported by Gallery Route One (www.galleryrouteone.org) and the Lucid Art Foundation with additional support from the West Marin Community Foundation, I used 7 local plants to make the handmade paper for the hundreds of paper feathers to hang from the big nest in the Commons and the many smaller nests installed int he trees along main street (Hwy. 1) in Point Reyes Station.  

The paper pulp has seeds to feed the birds and I also used some pulp made from old blue jeans and abaca (musa textilus) as well as these 7 local plants:

Olive tree bark

Image

 

The olive bark pulp was a nice tan color and interesting texture, but a little difficult to remove from the papermaking mould.

Eucalyptus bark

Image

 

I think eucalyptus bark pulp is great and a nice rich dark brown color.  I gathered the bark that was peeling off the giant trees along the roadside in this part of California. 

Willow bark (Salix arroya)

Image

 

These willow trees are everywhere along the roadsides in the Point Reyes area.  The road maintenance crew was trimming back the trees so they don’t cover up the road!  I was able to get many branches that were useful for papermaking as well as for making the nests.  This willow is not so bendable as weeping willow, but still a great material for basketmaking as well as the bark being useful to make paper pulp.  I like the color of the paper, a nice golden tan, but I think I needed to cook it longer as it was still very tough and stringy even after cooking for 4 hours. 

Crocosmia leaves

Image

This flower is a member of the lily family, and the flowers are yellow and looks somewhat like day lily.  It was growing in the West Marin School garden near where we were making the handmade paper feathers for this public art project.  It proved to be an excellent plant for papermaking.

Canna leaves

Image

There were also many canna lily flowers in the school garden.  This one has beautiful red flowers.  The leaves look big and promising for papermaking, but actually it gave little pulp.  The leaves cook down so much that only a handful of pulp remained after the preparation.  The paper is nice and crisp but it is probably not worth the trouble since the yield is so little.

Cattail leaves

Image

 

Cattail leaves are great for making paper, and I have used this plant before in Taiwan and other places.  There are many cattails growing along the Tomales Bay in the Point Reyes area.  This is one of the most plentiful plants for papermaking in the area and it makes great paper…a nice tan color and good texture. 

Corn husks

Image

 

Corn husks are good for papermaking although the texture is a little rough.  I got the corn husks by saving all the husks from the corn we ate during the 3 -week residency….yum.  Corn husks are also easy to get at the local grocery store as usually they take away some outside husks before putting the corn out for sale.

If you have any questions or want more information just email me.  I made a sample book for Gallery Route One and Lucid Art Foundation that has the complete recipe and samples of paper made from all 7 of these plants used in the “For the Birds” project, Sept. 7 – 25, 2013.

 

 

 

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