"I am an artist who makes folded things, objects that some define as books." —V. Schapers, Berkeley, CA 2013
"Coming to Japan almost a decade ago with a scholarship after graduation I joined a paper shop in the Bunkyo ward of Tokyo for an internship. The extraordinary selection of paper and the very traditional hierarchy I experienced during the day stood in harsh contrast to what happened outside this small shop.
"Working with the finest papers and dyeing them with natural colors I got a feeling for the refined materials you still find in Japan but since this shop is located in Tokyo I also got attracted very much by the fast changing and glittering aspects of modern Japan.
"The love and openness to new materials and techniques side by side to the awareness of the tradition is what really impresses me and I feel very close to it. It is e.g. not the empty tatami-style room you find in Tokyo but small apartments filled with stuffed toys and flat-screen Televisions as well as old chests and valuable ceramics.
"This describes very much my working situation in Japan. On the one hand, I love the refined working materials and tools you can get and for most of my projects these are the starting point. But I also begin to add on a certain point very ordinary or non-valuable materials and techniques taken from daily life which evoke a new visual and haptic experience.
"The very starting point of every book is the text I select to work with and while reading and thinking about it I start to collect materials which could be used."
- Veronika Schapers
Website
In Collection:
Koninklijke Bibliotheek, Nationale Bibliotheek van Nederland
Bücher || BooksMassachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Libraries
AokigaharaSan Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SF MOMA)
Pyongyang