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Seasonal Turns: Four Accordion Books
Seasonal Turns: Four Accordion Books
Seasonal Turns: Four Accordion Books

Seasonal Turns: Four Accordion Books

Maker Nettles, Bea American, b. 1946
Date1998
Dimensionsoverall: 4 1/2 in x 4 1/2 in x 1 in
Credit LineSpecial Books Collection
Object numberB2017:9
About the ArtistBea Nettles has been making artists' books and photographic works since the 1970s, often using alternative photographic processes, juxtaposing multiple images, or incorporating text. After earning a BFA at the University of Florida in 1968, Nettles went on to pursue an MFA at the University of Illinois. She graduated in 1970 and participated in her first major exhibition later that year, when her work was featured in Photography into Sculpture at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. In the following decades Nettles continued to take an experimental approach to photography, which has been influential, exploring the limits of the medium and helping to usher in the widespread use of photography in mixed media works. In 1977, she published a how-to guide devoted to alternative processes, entitled "Breaking the Rules: A Photo Media Cookbook."

Much of Nettles' work has an autobiographical foundation, as exemplified in one of her best-known photographic books, Life Lessons: A Mother's Journal. In this long-term project, which she started after the birth of her first child in 1978, Nettles reflects unsentimentally on the experience of motherhood through black-and-white photographs and textual elements. In the mid-1990s, when Nettles was in her late forties, she began a series titled Turning 50, which she eventually published as a small-sized book. One of the photographs from this series, a self-portrait, is a central element in the mixed-media work Birch Bark (1995), which Nettles made in collaboration with Marilyn Sward and Audrey Niffenegger at the Chicago Center for the Book Arts. Nettles' photograph, printed at an intimate size, is stitched to a sheet of paper that was handmade by Sward and subsequently imprinted by Niffenegger with a birch bark pattern from a polymer plate. The printed paper covers over the photograph but the artists have cut a square flap that the viewer can lift up, as if peeling away the bark, to see the picture underneath. She began teaching at the University of Illinois in 1984, Urbana-Champaign, where she is currently Professor Emerita.

http://beanettles.com/