TRAVELING IN A TINY HOME THAT IS REALLY AN ARTISTS' BOOK ON WHEELS

Peter and Donna Thomas have been making fine press and artist's books for over 40 years. When they started, as craftspeople at Renaissance Faires, they fell in love with the graceful beauty of "gypsy wagon" caravans that other vendors had made to sleep in or use as booths for selling their wares. In 2009 Peter and Donna built their own tiny home on wheels, designed after a typical late 19th century Redding Wagon. This blog documents their trips around the country, taken to sell their artists' books, teach book arts workshops, and talk about making books as art; as well as to seek out and experience the beauty of the many different landscapes found across the USA.

Peter and Donna started their business in 1977 and made their first book in 1978, so from 2017-18 are traveling to celebrate 40 years of making books with shows in a dozen libraries across the country. See the schedule on the side bar to find if they are coming to a town near you....

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Sunday, April 22, 2018

Professor of Books, only in Florida.

The University of Central Florida in Orlando has a lot of students…around 60,000 enrolled students.  (They are #2 or 3 but then whose counting?) I don’t know if Florida can accommodate all of its qualified applicants, but UCF is clearly hosting a diverse population of students and the campus offers a vast array of opportunities for enrichment.



We visited the campus to see the show of our work in the library. 


We had a chance to meet about 1/1000th, or a tenth of one percent of the UCF student body when we gave a talk to a diverse group of students from the art department, showing our books and sharing our thoughts about the history and future of the artists’ book. I think we might have met the most creative percentage!



Giving tours of the wagon we had a very interesting conversation with Ryan Price, one of the graduating students from the printmaking department. I had admired his work in the graduates’ year-end show in the gallery, mostly large painted drawings, but there was one artists’ book. It was made by taking paintings made on both sides of an 18 by 24 inch sheet of art paper, folding them in half, and sewing the folios together to make up the text block. The inner fold showed the whole painting, but the next page spread was composed of two half-paintings.

What Ryan liked most about making his book was fitting the unmatched half pages together and then reworking them so they became a new art work. He liked how changing the sequence could change the story, and how the fragments of paintings took on whole new and different meanings when paired differently.

Ryans talk

I feel assured that future of the artists’ book is secure, with students like Ryan Price embracing the medium.


In nearby Rollins College, Rachel Simmons teaches a book arts class. During our visit we learned that between 1926-1951 Rollins even had a "Professor of Books!" It was Ke Francis a recently retired Professor of Books that got us to Orlando and UCF. The pictures that follow were taken at UCF:











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