Presented By: Center for Japanese Studies
CJS Noon Lecture Series
Becoming a Papermaker: Perspectives from Japan
Speaker: Aimee Lee, Artist-in-Residence, Morgan Conservatory (Cleveland, OH)
Japan's paper soared throughout history as the most well-known and beloved paper produced in East Asia, and as WWII bomb-laden paper balloons. Japan's papermakers are humble, hard-working artisans in rural areas who produce distinctive and varied papers. This lecture will present papermakers in Japan devoted to their craft, ranging from a village elder continuing his family's trade to a young woman inspired by a letter to spend years in training to start her own paper mill. American, Canadian, and Israeli papermakers join their native counterparts, highlighted through images, video, and their perspectives on the state of Japanese papermaking today.
Aimee Lee is an artist, papermaker, writer, and the foremost hanji researcher and practitioner in the United States (BA, Oberlin College; MFA, Columbia College Chicago). Her Fulbright research on Korean paper led to her award-winning book, Hanji Unfurled, and the first US hanji studio at Morgan Conservatory.
Cosponsored by the Nam Center for Korean Studies
Japan's paper soared throughout history as the most well-known and beloved paper produced in East Asia, and as WWII bomb-laden paper balloons. Japan's papermakers are humble, hard-working artisans in rural areas who produce distinctive and varied papers. This lecture will present papermakers in Japan devoted to their craft, ranging from a village elder continuing his family's trade to a young woman inspired by a letter to spend years in training to start her own paper mill. American, Canadian, and Israeli papermakers join their native counterparts, highlighted through images, video, and their perspectives on the state of Japanese papermaking today.
Aimee Lee is an artist, papermaker, writer, and the foremost hanji researcher and practitioner in the United States (BA, Oberlin College; MFA, Columbia College Chicago). Her Fulbright research on Korean paper led to her award-winning book, Hanji Unfurled, and the first US hanji studio at Morgan Conservatory.
Cosponsored by the Nam Center for Korean Studies
Co-Sponsored By
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