Monday, July 23, 2012

Body language


I'm scouring shops, flea markets, etc. for new anatomical images all the time. Yes, I'm obsessed with them. So obsessed that I created a line of greeting cards called "Body Language." My latest find? Beautiful, mint-condition illustrations from Wark's Modern Educator (Henry Wark, 1904). Each is 8" x 10."

You gotta love the 19th and early 20th century preoccupation with creating encyclopedic books. Wark's covers etiquette, economics, litigation, medicine, handwriting and lots more. It's chock full of maps, photographs, illustrations and charts. My copy, which cost $8, is missing a slew of maps but even so, I ended up with 25 fabulous ones. Now, the hunt is on for a complete edition!


Rethinking the book


Uncle Melvin Looks Back by Janice Kagermeier
Outside (top) includes an aerial photo of the Cincinnati neighborhood
that Janice's uncle grew up in, while the inside (bottom) tells his story.
Tearing books apart is essential to my art, but that doesn't mean that I don't appreciate books in all their many forms. That appreciation led me to join the Cincinnati Book Arts Society a few years ago. Now, I'm in the study group, which meets monthly to explore new techniques in bookmaking, and I'm a new member of the board.

I keep thinking that books will make their way into my art, although I haven't brought the two together yet. Meanwhile, plenty of other members have done just that and there are some riveting examples in Bookworks 13 at the public library's main branch downtown. They are at turns funny, poignant, whimsical and serious, and the forms range from cascading pages to a 9-yard scroll.

The library has been a major supporter of the annual exhibit and even buys a couple of books each year for its artists' books collection. This year, CBAS also will purchase a book to donate to the library. Some of the books in the collection are on display through Aug. 12 on the 2nd and 3rd floors of the main library.

Bookworks 13 continues through Sept. 2, with a walk-through with some of the artists at 2 p.m. on Sunday Aug. 26. For more about the exhibit and CBAS, check out CityBeat's review of the exhibition or the Enquirer's feature story on it or the CBAS blog.