La Explosión by Cabbagehead Press
"These prints are the result [of] an ongoing project that began as a sabbatical research project in 2001-2002. The subject is landmines and landmine victims. The UN estimates that 100 million mines, or more, may be deployed in 62 nations. That’s one mine in the ground for every 50 humans on earth. Every 15 minutes, somebody steps on a landmine. These 'hidden killers' pose a constant threat to the safety of local populations long after the guns of war have been silenced.
"The project involves making handmade paper and printing landmine images, facts, and stories of survivors and victims on it. In hand papermaking, we can make paper from used cotton, linen, or silk clothing – rags – as well as plant fibers and other sources of cellulose. I have collected articles of clothing from landmine victims (this means only a representative piece of clothing – something the person wears or wore – not from the accident itself), fibrous plants from mine locations, and the currencies of nations that make or have made landmines. All of this is pulped and made into the paper for my art."
"Through a victim assistance agency, Nicaraguan landmine victim Agustín Matey Ramos sent me a red t-shirt along with his story of injury. His shirt was beaten and pulp-painted onto the base paper, made from burlap coffee sacks from the region (he was injured while working on a coffee plantation) and shredded Nicaraguan, Soviet, and American currency. Imagery includes coffee plant diagrams and ghostly landmines of American and Soviet manufacture, those used during the Contra War of the 1980s."
Processes and Dimensions
By John RisseeuwTempe, Arizona: Cabbagehead Press, 2003. Edition of 35.
14" x 11", irregular, single sheet. Woodcut, letterpress, polymer relief, and hand coloring on pulp painted variable handmade paper.