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Primrose Press

artist's books and prints by Tia Blassingame
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ARLIS 2025 Keynote

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Von Hess Visiting Artist

‘Pause was offset printed at the Borowsky Center for Publication Arts, letterpress printed in the letterpress studio, and laser cut in the Albert M. Greenfield Makerspace at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania over one week at the end of April/start of May 2024, and was funded by the von Hess Visiting Artist Program.

Our Histories and Futures: Making New Print and Book Arts Work with/in Libraries

Our Histories and Futures: Making New Print and Book Arts Work with/in Libraries

Thursday, January 18, 2024. 4:00 pm – 5:30 pm

William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, 2520 Cimarron Street, Los Angeles, California

Details: www.1718.ucla.edu/events/kanter-2024

Printmaker/book artist Tia Blassingame’s creative practice marries time in the reading room handling historical documents and time in the studio working with typefaces, ink, paper, paint, and dyes in order to develop artists’ books that help readers/viewers connect to history and make connections to the present and futures. Fresh from a stint as the Bodleian Bibliographical Press Printer-in-Residence at the Bodleian Libraries, Blassingame will discuss her experiences as a researcher, artist, and educator working in and with libraries while sharing the resulting artist’s book and print projects, including a new Book/Print Artist/Scholar of Color Collective commissioned work.

The lecture is free to attend with advance registration, and will be held in-person at the Clark Library. Registration form will post here approximately one month in advance of the program. Registration will close on Wednesday, January 17 at 5:00 p.m. Seating is limited at the Clark Library; walk-in registrants are welcome as space permits.

Photo credit: Wojtek Lubowiecki, Bodleian Libraries

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We Rise (Together)

We Rise (Together): Taking and Making Space for BIPOC Book Arts Creatives, Cultures, and Histories

Tuesday 24 October 2023

1pm–2pm

At the Weston Library

Free event, booking required

About the event

Tia Blassingame will introduce her work leading the Book/Print Artist/Scholar of Color Collective (aka Book/Print Collective) and will share methods for supporting and empowering BIPOC book and print artists so they can thrive in the book arts field and beyond. She will also discuss her educational work that centres Black American artists working in the book form and her curatorial work challenging the exclusion and erasure of Global Majority traditions and artistry in hand papermaking.

Founded in 2019 by book artist and printmaker Tia Blassingame, the Book/Print Artist/Scholar of Color Collective brings Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) book artists, papermakers, curators, letterpress printers, printmakers into conversation and collaboration with scholars of BIPOC Book History and Print Culture to build community, support systems.

Speaker

Tia Blassingame is Printer in Residence at the Bibliographical Press, Bodleian Libraries, during October 2023.

Employing book arts and printmaking techniques, Tia Blassingame reconstructs charged images and histories for a nuanced discussion on issues of race and racism. Blassingame is an Associate Professor of Book Arts at Scripps College, and is the Director of Scripps College Press.

Booking information

When you have booked your place, the ticketing system will send you an automated confirmation.

Location

This lecture will be held in person in the Sir Victor Blank Lecture Theatre at the Weston Library.

Weston Library, Broad Street, Oxford, OX1 3BG

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BOOKsmART/ Art on Paper

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Bodleian Printer-in-Residence

Tia Blassingame will be printer in residence at the Bodleian Bibliographical Press from 9 October to 9 November 2023. During this time she will develop existing work (Black: A Handbook), make new work, research with Bodleian Special Collections, and share her practice with Bodleian staff and meet local groups, students, and the public.

Blassingame is a book artist, a printer, publisher (Primrose Press), a curator and an educator. She uses book arts and printmaking (letterpress, pressure printing, digital printing) to create racially-charged images that seduce the reader into nuanced discussions on issues of race and racism.

During the period of her residency, Blassingame’s book ‘Mourning/Warning’ will be on display in the Alphabets Alive! exhibition in the Weston Library. As part of this exhibition, on Saturday 14 October, Blassingame will participate in a public engagement event, The ABC of Bodley a bookbinding workshop with Bodleian Conservator Andrew Honey.

On 24 October, 1-2pm, join us for her talk, We Rise (Together): Taking and Making Space for BIPOC Book Arts Creatives, Cultures, and Histories, Lecture Theatre, Weston Library. Tia Blassingame will introduce her work with the Book/Print Artist/Scholar of Color Collective and talk through methods to support and empower BIPOC book and print artists so that they can thrive in the book arts field and beyond.

https://blogs.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/theconveyor/bodleian-printer-in-residence-tia-blassingame

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Paper Is People panel

Artist Panel: Paper Is People

moderated by Tia Blassingame and Stephanie Sauer

Tuesday, July 18; 6–7:30pm CT

Registration: https://www.mnbookarts.org/artist-panel-paper-is-people/

Join us for a panel conversation between co-curators, Tia Blassingame and Stephanie Sauer, and select exhibiting artists: Page Chang, Hong Hong, Chenta Laury, and Skye Tafoya. This virtual conversation will explore the importance of each artist’s relationship to the tradition of papermaking they practice, and what they are doing to revitalize and adapt those traditions.

Paper Is People: Decolonizing Global Paper Cultures offers a new definition of paper­ within a global and decolonial framework. This exhibition features works by local, national, and international artists and explores the vital role substrates play in human communities and how meaning is made from what we might call paper and papermaking. The exhibition is on view in MCBA’s Main Gallery April 14 through August 12, with a reception on Thursday, June 22.

Paper Is People is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts and a Craft Research Fund grant from the Center for Craft.

Certificate: 1.5 hours, Category C

$12 suggested donation/participant; additional donations are welcome as they support our ability to host this programming

What you’ll need to participate

Tech requirements: For this virtual artist panel we recommend joining on a laptop or desktop computer with a camera and microphone, if possible. You will receive step-by-step instructions for downloading Zoom (it’s free!) and accessing the conversation online approximately 2 days before the panel’s start date.

Please note: Registration closes 7/14 at midnight (CT).

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Paper Is People

Paper Is People: Decolonizing Global Paper Cultures

MCBA Main Gallery

April 14 – August 12, 2023

Reception: Thursday, June 22, 7–9pm

Reception RSVP

Free and open to the public

Paper Is People: Decolonizing Global Paper Cultures, co-curated by Tia Blassingame and Stephanie Sauer, offers a new definition of paper­ within a global and decolonial framework. Featuring works by local, national, and international artists, this exhibition explores the vital role substrates play in human communities and how meaning is made from what we might call paper and papermaking.

Exhibiting artists include Alisa Banks, Hannah Chalew, Page Chang, Julio Laja Chichicaxtle, Kelly Church, Hong Hong, Chenta Laury, Aimee Lee, Radha Pandey, the Seringô Collective, and Skye Tafoya.

After premiering at Minnesota Center for Book Arts, Paper Is People will be available to travel beginning in late August, 2023.

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Many

Many exhibit at Craft Contemporary, Los Angeles, California thru September 11

Many features twelve Los Angeles-based artists who utilize multiples in their artistic practices. The artists create two- and three-dimensional works using a variety of materials and processes including printing, casting, repetition, and accumulation. Their works exemplify the unique power of multiples to record and disseminate information, amplify narratives, and investigate various modes of labor and production.

Exhibition Artists: Zeina Baltagi, Tia Blassingame, Sula Bermúdez-Silverman, John Birtle, Joel Freeman, Pamela Smith Hudson, Saj Issa, Gelare Khoshgozaran, Álvaro D. Márquez, Narsiso Martinez, Stephanie Mercado, Aryana Minai.

This exhibition is supported in part by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors through the Los Angeles County Department of Arts and Culture and the City of Los Angeles, Department of Cultural Affairs.

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Troubling exhibit March-June 2022

Troubling: artists’ books that enlighten and disrupt old ways of being and seeing

BY TIA BLASSINGAME AND ELLEN SHEFFIELD

WHEN: Mar 4 – Jun 22, 2022

WHERE: Rachel Gallery, Bainbridge Island Museum of Art, Bainbridge Island, Washington

Within the deep lineage of visual art that explores challenging subject matter, the genre of Artists’ Books has long played an integral role in educating about and advocating for themes of socio-political and cultural justice topics. Book artists utilize the book form in these cases to trouble—or disrupt— the status quo. In some instances, the artist is also the disruptor, as in Clarissa Sligh’s It Wasn’t Little Rock. The work describes her family’s experience with racism and school integration in 1956 where she was the lead plaintiff in a school desegregation class action suit. Co-curated by Ellen Sheffield and Tia Blassingame, Troubling: artists’ books that enlighten and disrupt old ways of being and seeing is an exhibition of Artists’ Books that explore racial, environmental, and LGBTQIA+ justice themes.

Artists’ books have an uncanny ability to take even the most challenging, complex, polarizing content and mix it with techniques from papermaking to paper engineering and printmaking with almost any other elements—from photography and poetry to cyanotypes and letterpress printing—in order to have a conversation with the reader/viewer. These conversations may be intimate, emotional, educational, thought-provoking, opinion-altering, and world view expanding. Especially relevant and timely given the collective anxiety of the continuing pandemic, escalating environmental crises, and ongoing devastating effects of systemic racism, our need for engaging with difficult issues is even more urgent.

In Reparations, graphic designer and former Minister of Culture for the Black Panther Party Emory Douglas forms a pictograph formed by chained human figures to make the point for reparations for the descendants of enslaved Africans. Allison Leialoha Milham combines music with historical documents to discuss the occupied state of Hawai’i in Uluhaimalama: Legacies of Lili’uokalani.

Jaime Lynn Shafer’s Mix and Match Families, fights against prejudices that question the validity, and at times possibilities, of familial units that society may not consider acceptable or normal. In Morgan Stewart’s A Bare Bones Guide to Pronouns, talking skeletons—in an angry and confrontational or simply informational manner depending upon the edition—introduce the use of and respect for a person’s pronouns.

Shu-Ju Wang’s Superfoodland!, an artist’s book in the form of a board game, examines the environmental effects of consumerism and our obsession with the latest superfood; Randha Pandey’s Deep Time presents a sequence of clove and indigo dyed papers depicting water and soil, erosion and sedimentation with topographical map die-cuts embodying these alarming environmental shifts.

To complement Troubling, the Book/Print Artist/Scholar of Color Collective members were invited by Blassingame and Sheffield to create a patchwork quilt-like window piece to bring together seemingly disparate voices and identities, signaling to visitors strength in community. The installation hangs proudly in Bainbridge Island Museum of Art’s Beacon Window Gallery, facing out toward the thousands of visitors arriving by ferry each day. The collaborative window piece contains images from artists’ books by five Book/Print Collective members Alisa Banks (Armoire), Nabil Gonzalez (Who Are You?), Sun Young Kang (Filtered Memories), Skye Tafoya (5:46 am, 2021), and Lukaza Branfman-Verissimo (#TakeCareOf).

The Book/Print Artist/Scholar of Color Collective is a group founded by Tia Blassingame in 2019 that brings Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) book artists, papermakers, curators, letterpress printers, and printmakers into conversation and collaboration with Book History and Print Culture scholars in order to build community and support systems.

Tia Blassingame is a book artist and printmaker exploring the intersection of race, history, and perception. Utilizing printmaking and book arts techniques, she renders racially-charged images, histories for a nuanced discussion on issues of race and racism. In 2019, she founded the Book/ Print Artist/Scholar of Color Collective, which has over forty members. Blassingame is an Assistant Professor of Art at Scripps College, where she teaches Book Arts and serves as the Director of Scripps College Press.

Ellen Sheffield is a visual artist, writer, and teacher based in Gambier, Ohio and Point Richmond, California. Her works on paper and artist’s books are grounded in collaborations with poets, experiments with found text and working with visual scores to engage themes of place, memory, and language perception. She recently completed fourteen years of teaching Book Arts in the Kenyon College Art Department and currently teaches virtual workshops for arts centers around the country.

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Assembling/Reassembling – Why Books NOW?

Assembling/Reassembling – Why Books NOW?

RSVP via Eventbrite link below

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/assemblingreassembling-why-books-now-tickets-148269555231

June 24, 2021 1:00 pm

Why books NOW? Are books symbolic objects? Have books created political change? What is it that makes artists’ books a unique /compelling art form? Can artists’ books advance social justice for women? This panel discussion will tackle the history and current state of independent press and self-publishing by women artists making books as an art form.

This panel discussion focuses on book aesthetics in the history and current state of independent press and self-publishing by women artists. Though increasingly active in California publishing over the last century, as in so many areas, women have not always been as visible as their contributions deserve. Showcasing a diverse range of women artists and curators, the panel address the ways in which women artists’ publications create a distinct discourse, whether that arises from editorial ethics or curatorial decisions, feminist methods, specific topics and themes, or anticipated audiences. Most importantly, the panel will call attention to vibrant works of art being made in the book format designed to bring transformative points of view into published form.

Tia Blassingame Artist, Professor and Press Director, Scripps College

Johanna Drucker Moderator, Artist, Breslauer Professor, Information Studies, UCLA

Alexandra Grant Artist, Publisher, X Artists’ Books

Marcia Reed Chief Curator, The Getty Research Institute

Susan Sironi Artist

This event is co-sponsored with: Now Be Here Guest Curator Initiative, Scripps College, UCLA Center for the Study of Women, & X Artists’ Books.

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Focus on Book Arts (FOBA) July 16

Tia Blassingame: Book Arts Futures

Musings on the future of the field

Friday, July 16, 2021, 5:00pm PDT

REGISTER for featured speaker

https://focusonbookarts.org/featuredspeaker/

Registration is required; virtual conference registration is free, but space is limited.

A book artist and printmaker exploring the intersection of race, history, and perception, Tia Blassingame often incorporates archival research and her own poetry in her artist’s book projects for nuanced discussions of racism in the United States. In 2019, Blassingame founded the Book/Print Artist/Scholar of Color collective to bring Book History and Print Culture scholars into conversation and collaboration with Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC) book artists, papermakers, curators, letterpress printers, printmakers for building community and support systems.

Blassingame is an Assistant Professor of Book Arts at Scripps College and serves as the Director of Scripps College Press.

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Quarantine Public Library

As part of the Book/Print Artist/Scholar of Color Collective’s partnership with Quarantine Public Library, I created an instant book, Darkness Aids Germination, that is now available on their website with new titles by five collective members: Alisa Banks, Tiffany E. Barber, Hong Hong, Akua Lezli Hope, and Rejin Leys.

“Quarantine Public Library is a repository of books made by artists. The works published here are for anyone to freely download, print and assemble—to keep or give away.

This collaborative project was dreamed up by Katie Garth and Tracy Honn in May 2020. We love artists’ books, zines, and libraries; art and poetry; words and pictures. We wanted to make something to share as many of us are staying at home, disconnected from art, books, and one another. The project is not about COVID-19, but is explicitly of its time.

With brisk attention, a lot of talking and correspondence, and the enthusiastic good will of generous artists who say yes, we offer this as a gift to share and circulate in a discombobulated time.

EveryoneOn

In the spirit of our project, donations generated by QPL will be directed to EveryoneOn, a non-profit that connects low-income families to affordable internet service and computers. We admire their clear goals and genuine service benefits—the organization “believe[s] in the democratizing power of the internet and technology, especially for low-income and marginalized communities,” and so do we.”

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Artist Residency

Tia Blassingame will be the third Book/Print Artist/Scholar of Color Collective member to enjoy a two-week artist residency at Halden Bookworks, following Rhiannon "Skye" Tafoya and Colette Gaiter. The 2024 artists-in-residence are Jerushia Graham, Devin Fitzgerald, and Myron Beasley.

Scheduled Events

August 20: Artist Talk, 4-5 pm, @ostfoldkunstsenter, Frederikstad

August 27: Artist Talk, 2pm, @house_of_foundation, Moss

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Back to Upcoming and Recent Events
1
ARLIS
Von Hess Visiting Artist at the Borowsky Center for Publication Arts, University of the Arts, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
1
Von Hess Visiting Artist
1
ucla
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We Rise (Together)
2
BOOKsmART/ Art on Paper
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Bodleian Printer-in-Residence
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Paper Is People panel
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Paper Is People
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Many
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Troubling exhibit March-June 2022
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Cultural Substrates As Paper
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Assembling/Reassembling – Why Books NOW?
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Focus on Book Arts (FOBA) July 16
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Hamilton Hang May 14th 12pm CST
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Pandemic Printing March 16th 2pm EST
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Quarantine Public Library
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Presence April 7th 4:45pm
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Artist Residency

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