30 years ago, the Papermakers & Artists of Queensland (POQ) first formed – in July it was their PEARL anniversary.
As a diverse collective of artists (that allowed me to become a member) we were asked to respond to the notion of “Pearl” to assemble an exhibit of artworks to mark this occasion.
My thoughts, naturally, turned to folding and I was reminded of an organic 3D form I last explored for “The Offering” inspired by the work by legend Paul Jackson.
The idea was simple – using one set of slightly overlapping pleats in one direction, that are then corrugated in the perpendicular direction, you can “tease” dimensionality by “cheating” the overlap with a delicate pull.
Taking a square of trusty Kraft paper, I mocked up a Maquette, pleating and corrugating around a central line, then “MacGyvered” a hinge using simple box-pleating techniques, as I had the notion it should be a “book” of sorts. The hinge mechanism had a natural gutter that allowed me to bind pages securely inside also.
For the production fold, I chose metallicized pearlescent “Terryfoil”, I cut 2x 25cm squares and pleated and corrugated, carefully, then spread the pleats until it achieved the desired curvaceousness.
I chose white white leaves for the pages of the book, affixed them permanently, shaped to be shell-shape, then instantly regretted not using bone or ivory paper as the white white inside the pearlescent shells looked mauve by some weird trick of optics.
To finish each I then affixed a “pearl” in-between the two middle sheets of the book and presto – a pearler of an idea was finished.