Jody Williams | |
Nationality: | American |
Education: | Rochester Institute of Technology (MFA); Carleton College (BA) |
Field: | Book arts, printmaking |
Jody Williams (born 1956) is an American artist, writer, and teacher. She creates and publishes artist's books under the imprint Flying Paper Press in her studio in Minneapolis, Minnesota. She works in a range of media, including artist's books, collages, drawings, etchings, bronze sculptures, and mixed-media boxes that she calls not-empty boxes.
Williams teaches printmaking and book arts at the Minneapolis College of Art and Design[1] and the Minnesota Center for Book Arts.[2]
Williams grew up near Chicago. She learned to write her name when she was four years old so she could get her own library card, and her love of books eventually led her to making them herself.[3] She credits her love for creating order out of chaos to growing up with five siblings in a family that moved four times before she was ten. In a 2016 artist statement, she wrote, "I found it necessary to keep my possessions small, contained, and protected. As an adult, the compulsion to collect, organize and find containers for things has remained with me, and has directed much of my artwork."[4]
Williams earned a BA cum laude from Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota, in 1978, and an MFA in printmaking from the Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, New York.
Williams is perhaps best known for what art critic of the Minneapolis Star Tribune newspaper Mary Abbe called "meticulously designed miniature books".[5] Williams also constructs intricate multi-part boxes and other containers that display artifacts and natural specimens, along the lines of the 17th-century Wunderkammer, or cabinet of wonders. Her work shows the influence of libraries, books, and research. The inclusion in her art of feathers, grasses, flower petals, seedpods, and other fragile fragments that Williams collects on walks and bike rides reflects her passionate interest in the natural world.[6]
Observing, Thinking, Breathing: The Nancy Gast Riss Carleton '77 Cabinet of Wonders, permanently on display at the Gould Library at Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota, is one of Williams's most complex works.[7] The 48-inch-wide cabinet is divided into "observing", "thinking", and "breathing" sections. Reflecting the liberal-arts environment, it includes a tiny Periodic Table of Elements and beakers; a miniature desk with typewriter and a copy of The Ambassadors by Henry James on it; and samples of water, maple seeds, dried thistles, and other specimens Williams collected from the prairie land and the arboretum on campus.[8]
In 2011 the Twin Cities PBS television show Minnesota Originals featured Williams and her book Small Orders, a tiny book of prints of invertebrates.[9]
Besides teaching at the Minneapolis College of Art and Design[10] and Minnesota Center for Book Arts,[11] Williams also teaches and lectures across Europe and the United States, including at the University of Iowa Center for the Book.[12]
Williams is an early member of Form+Content Gallery, an artist-owned and run gallery in downtown Minneapolis.[13] Members show their own artwork and also curate shows from nonmember artists. Unlike most commercial or institutional galleries, Form+Content allows artists to retain control of their show.[14]