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PRINT-2320-1: Bookworks: Sensory Storytelling for Artists and Writers

Spring 2026

Subject: Printmaking
Type: Studio
Delivery Mode: In-Person
Level: Undergraduate

Course Dates: January 20, 2026 — May 11, 2026
Meetings:
Tue 12:15-05:45PM, Double Ground - D148
Tue 12:15-05:45PM, Double Ground - D160
Instructor: Lyn Patterson

Units: 3.0
Enrolled: 4/8

Description:

What happens when stories move off the page and into the body, the hand, the ear? In this course, students will explore how writing can function as a lived experience: visual, tactile, spatial, and time-based. Drawing from traditions in artist books and letterpress, we will investigate how to give language form and presence. This class invites writers and artists to play with how narrative takes shape across book forms and into the sensory field. We will move fluidly between tactile formats and experimental approaches. Students are encouraged to consider where their words want to live.We will explore visual poetics and text-based experimentation, artist books and book objects, embodied and spatial storytelling, playful and unconventional narrative structures, and techniques for translating writing into multisensory experiences. Open to writers, artists, and interdisciplinary creatives at any level who are curious about merging language with form. Whether you are a poet looking to expand beyond the page or an artist seeking new ways to tell stories, this course offers a space for bold exploration and cross-genre play.The book is a hand-held technology that has completely transformed human culture. Bookworks brings together the many craft, art, and design practices that are integral to making books. This studio class integrates a range of media and materials, content, sequences, and structures into one movable, tactile object. Projects incorporate each artist's interests and work inventively with a variety of traditional and experimental book forms. We will refine our making skills alongside investigations of the book as an expressive place for form and content through storytelling, personal narrative, curatorial impulses, and commentary on broader cultural and political conditions of contemporary life. This class draws equally from Bay Area book art history within the California Arts and Crafts Movement, and the exuberant resurgence of DIY and self-publishing in contemporary art.From folded accordions and Japanese bindings, to hardcover casebound books and transformative box constructions, Bookworks 1 covers hands-on skills, techniques, and personal narrative development. Weekly demonstrations and individual projects guide students through experimentation and towards a comprehensive body of artwork in the book form. The class includes an introduction to letterpress printing with handset type and polymer plates, artist multiples and editioning, text and image sequencing, with field trips and special collection visits to view historical and contemporary book art works. Open to beginning and advanced students from any major.

Pre-Requisites and Co-Requisites:

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