Sculptural Books
Title: Inside The Page—Sculptural Books
Artform: Cut paper folded book art
Goals/Objectives
Using sculptural book forms, participants convey a visual, multidimensional story of their subjects’ lives.
Studio Work
Participants choose and interview a person for their project, aided by JWA resources. (See Artful Disclosure Toolkit Part I.)
After examining a variety of book forms, participants are introduced to a creative use of book forms employed by different artists.
The process results in an assemblage—transforming old, often recycled materials into folded, three-dimensional sculptures.
Materials
- Used books
- An assortment of papers
- Paint, colored pencils, metallic pens
- Exacto knives
- Transparencies
- Images from magazines and the internet that can enhance a theme or story idea participants want to project
Inspiration
Unique ways artists use book forms to creatively translate two-dimensional pages into a three-dimensional construction, using folded paper and repurposing used books.
Sheila Myer Miller and Barbara Ellison Rosenblit, Pentimento: Revealing Women’s Stories
Exhibition
Participants reflect on their creative process and why they chose a specific book form to represents their honoree.
The finished works can be displayed on bookshelves or atop cabinets. In a synagogue or community center or school media center, these artistic three-dimensional sculptural books are a beautiful counterpoint to the notion of “reading” a person. Tented artist statements can stand alongside the Sculptural Books to invite the viewer into the process and person they represent.