Paper Is People: Decolonizing Global Paper Cultures
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.
Viewed together, the works on display seek to open a conversation around what paper is across cultures today: a vessel for collective memory, a body, a site of meaning, a living ancestor, and a form of cultural survival and resistance. Our ideas about paper are linked to how we value traditions of language, knowledge production, creative expression, storytelling, and history. Many of us think of paper as thin sheets fashioned from fibrous pulp, but this understanding leans heavily on European applications and usage, with its roots in ancient Chinese technology and centuries of violent occupation, enslavement, and trade.
In the Indigenous and oral cultures represented here, baskets, tapestries, and other handmade substrates act as vessels and embodiments of culture and memory.
To appreciate global paper cultures in a decolonial context, it is important to consider definitions of paper that move beyond those created and sanctioned by imperial powers. In the Indigenous and oral cultures represented here, baskets, tapestries, and other handmade substrates act as vessels and embodiments of culture and memory. Some even hold status as animate members of their community. Among peoples subjugated under slavery and denied access to literacy and the requisite tools for creating paper and books, maintaining and building upon their threatened cultural knowledge required creativity like the kind exhibited in African American quilts. Paper Is People presents each cultural substrate as a new definition within contextualized, multimedia displays that invite thoughtful participation and engagement of the senses. Visitors will have the opportunity to see paper samples, handle source materials, watch papermaking processes from source to finish, hear first-hand accounts from traditional practitioners, experience how contemporary artists are finding new applications for ancient technologies, and participate in a variety of workshops and talks.
Exhibiting Artists
Alisa Banks | Hannah Chalew | Page Chang | Julio Laja Chichicaxtle | Kelly Church | Hong Hong | Chenta Laury | Aimee Lee | Radha Pandey | The Seringô Collective | Skye Tafoya
Visit the exhibition during our open hours, Tuesday–Saturday, 10am–5pm and Thursdays until 7pm.
Free and open to the public
This project is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts. To find out more about how National Endowment for the Arts grants impact individuals and communities, visit www.arts.gov. This research was supported by a Craft Research Fund grant from the Center for Craft.
This project is part of the Wakpa Triennial, presented by Public Art Saint Paul.
Where
MCBA Main Gallery
When
April 14, 2023–August 12, 2023
Reception
Thursday, June 22, 7–9pm
Artist panel
Virtual, moderated by Tia Blassingame and Stephanie Sauer, Tuesday, July 18, 6–7:30pm
Workshops
Workshops for all skill levels offered by special visiting artists in conjunction with the exhibition pair traditional methodologies with contemporary sensibilities.
Indo-Islamic Papermaking
Virtual with Radha Pandey, Saturday, June 3, 10:30am–12pmVietnamese Papermaking
In-person with Veronica Pham, Saturday, June 17, 10am–4pm and Sunday, June 18, 1–4pmInk-Making from Ecology: Grounded in Place
In-person with Hannah Chalew, Saturday, June 24, 10am–4pmSustainable Papermaking with Repurposed Paper and Plastic
In-person with Hannah Chalew, Sunday, June 25, 10am–4pmEXHIBITION TOUR
Minnesota Center for Book Arts | April 14, 2023–August 12, 2023
San Francisco Center For the Book | October 28 – December 21, 2023
select exhibiting artists
about the Curators
Watch the paper is people artist panel
Upcoming Exhibitions