Archive for December, 2008

Thesis: book 5

thesis_kim1

My own collection consists of endless photos of my family at the dinner table. Almost every picture in my family’s albums includes us sitting around a table. Year after year, we are in the same positions, in the same house, often with the same people, usually celebrating some kind of holiday. I find this repetition and predictiability comforting, knowing that, although a photograph cannot always accurately portray our lives, we still continue to take them. I scanned over 200 photos from my collection and joined them together in one long line that turned into a 60-page book. The colored dots above each head refer to a key in the introduction paragraph and indicate people’s relationships to me. This book measures 6.5″ x 10.5″ and is 60 pages.

Thesis: book 4

thesis_john1

John Carr has had his 1948 Chevy truck for over 40 years, since he bought it from his high school’s bus driver when he was 15 year’s old. His relationship with this truck has lasted longer than his relationship with most people. I asked him to document the milestones in his life that involved his truck and created an accordian book that intertwines those timelines. The red, green and yellow wires that flow through the book represent the ties he has and the connection he feels towards this beloved vehicle. This book measures 8″ x 10″ and is 12 pages.

Thesis: book 3

thesis_joe2

Many of us moved to Baltimore specifically to go to school and went through the decision-making process of what to leave and what to bring along. I wanted to profile a graduate student who did just that. Joe Galbreath left some of his favorite records home, but made room for 5 mannequin heads, an Indian bust, a plastic skin diagram, and a mounted deer head. Each of these objects locates a specific room in his apartment. The deer head faces the entrance door, the skin diagram hangs in the bathroom, the Indian bust sits in the kitchen. Various mannequin heads decorate the shelves and bedroom. Through 4 moves and different living situations, these objects always go in those specific places. Each object has a history and a meaning for where it’s located.

The left side of every spread shows a diagram of each of Joe’s apartments. Colored dots and lines indicate where each object went and builds with objects as the book progresses. The final spread shows a large-scale version, including all the objects and their locations. This book measures 6.5″ x 8.25″ and is 24 pages.

Thesis: book 2

thesis_andy

I interviewed my brother, Andy, for this book. He has saved his collection of matchbox cars since he was 7 years old. At that age, he used to set up his cars into football teams and play them against each other. A play was ramming one car into the other, and whichever car didn’t tip over, won the ball. These incredibly beat up, wrecked cars were repeatedly taped together and used over and over. I photographed his car collection on a cement floor and illustrated our conversation throughout the book using graphic language from football play drawings. Each page is printed on both sides of heavy watercolor paper and bound with screwposts. The book measures 8.5″ x 13.25″ and is 22 pages.

Thesis: book 1

thesis_gram1

My thesis explores the attachments we make to ordinary objects; why they are kept, how they provide comfort, and how we use them to recreate a sense of home in new environments. I am interested in the kinds of relationships we form to our particular things and the meanings we assign to them. I am intrigued by the stories that exist behind these objects and what they tell us about ourselves and the things we value. I created a series of handmade books that illustrated 5 people’s collections. I let the narrative, the objects, and the personality of my subject shape the structure of each book to best display their particular set of things and tell their specific story. Each book is designed to encompass the individual’s personality, voice, and experience.

This book represents my grandmother Pauline’s ties to her old life and past friends. As she lives far away from her hometown and can no longer easily travel, she keeps connected to home and family through her phone conversations. I created an address book that maps the distances relatives and friends live away from Pauline. Each page represents 50 miles. Blank pages in between people add to the feeling of distance. This is a perfect bound accordian book, measures 5″ x 9″ and is 44 pages.



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