Helen M. Salzberg Artists in Residents

  • DOUGLAS PIERRE BAULOS (2021/22) is the Assistant Professor of Drawing at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and the curriculum director at Studio by the Tracks, an art center that provides free art classes to emotionally conflicted children and adults with Autism Spectrum Disorder or other mental illnesses. Doug's creative project revolves around a unique boxed collection of folio pages they plan to house in a large chitsu-style box. This series of pages will navigate the artist's interest in book structures, biodiversity, extinction, and vulnerability risks among the LGBTQI community. Photo credit: Kyle Carpenter

  • JAZ GRAF's (2021/2022)recent body of work juxtaposes synthetic and raw materials, the virtual gaze with organic imprints, and satellite imagery with dust, setting in motion a contemporary discourse around intergenerational memory and cultural preservation. For her creative project, Jaz plans to create an edition of books based on the structures of East Asian palm leaf tablets, connecting the monastic history of these manuscripts with her own family through the materials she'll use––like her own printed papers that feature the pattern of her grandmother's pa-nung, her silk wrap skirt. Photo credit: Laos Fois

  • Keri Miki-Lani Schroeder (2019-2020) is a book artist based in San Antonio, Texas. She is a graduate of Mills College (MFA in Book Art & Creative Writing, 2015), a former studio assistant for Julie Chen at Flying Fish Press, and is currently an edition bookbinder at BookLab II with Craig Jensen. She is the proprietor of Coyote Bones Press. Keri’s proposed Salzberg Residency creative project is a limited edition artists’ book about the dusky seaside sparrow, a Florida bird declared extinct in 1990.

  • Merike Van Zanten (2018-19) is a Dutch artist who specializes in eco printing, a technique of extracting color and images from plants through steam. Her creative project began with substantive research and experiments in eco printing on various substrates and techniques in natural dyes for book arts applications. Her experiments were bound into an artists’ book unified by technique.

  • Marie Marcano (2017) started making books while pursuing her BFA in graphic design at the Corcoran School of Art and Design in Washington, DC. She is originally from Venezuela but came to Miami in 2002. She's been an active member of the South Florida Calligraphy Guild since 2003. Her creative project was a Spanish language artists' book titled Vainilla y Xocolatl.

  • Ingrid Schindall (2016) is a passionate and productive printmaker and book artist based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. She has a persistent and methodical yet curious and experimental studio practice. Her prints and artists' books have been exhibited internationally and throughout the east coast. Her creative project was a limited edition book of poetry titled Tidal.

  • Brooke Frank (2016) is an emerging artist from South Florida. She graduated Magna Cum Laude with her BFA in painting from Florida Atlantic University, and spent most of her undergraduate degree as a student assistant at the Jaffe Center for Book Arts. She is currently pursuing an MFA at the University of Texas. Her creative project was a portfolio of subtractive process paintings on National Geographic pages titled Syntax / Sublimation / Off the Record.

  • Stephanie Wolff (2015) has a long history in the book arts, both in the creation of books and their conservation. She worked for nearly ten years in conservation at Preservation Services and the Book Arts Workshop at Dartmouth College Library in Hanover, New Hampshire, where she developed excellent bench skills. Her creative project was a limited edition book titled 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 [The Beaufort Wind Scale].

  • Julia Arredondo (2014) is a Texas native who runs Vice Versa Press, an independently run printmaking and publishing entity. Julia travels, makes zines, and makes prints based on love, life, turmoil, and everyday sillies. Her creative project was a limited edition pop-up book titled Baltimore Breakups: A Pop-Up Memoir.

  • Tom Virgin (2013) is the proprietor of Extra Virgin Press, established during a third residency at the Anderson Center in Red Wing, Minnesota in 2013. He lives in Miami. His creative project was a collaborative limited edition book, working with a group of Miami artists and writers, titled Conversation Too.

  • Paula Marie Gourley (2013) is a native of Carmel, California and an unrepentant Francophile. She founded Pelegaya Press & Paperworks in 1975 and spent years learning to bind books from some of the world's best mentors. Her creative project, printed under her Lilyhouse Studio Editions imprint, was a limited edition book about Florida writer Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings titled A Visit to Cross Creek.

  • Lorna Ruth Galloway (2012) is a graduate of Florida Atlantic University, receiving her Bachelor of Fine Arts degree with a concentration in Printmaking. In her work, she primarily focuses on four color screenprints. She has since earned an MFA from Florida International University. Her creative project was a limited edition portfolio about midcentury modern Miami design titled MiMo: Miami Modern.

  • Dorothy Simpson Krause (2012) is a painter, collage artist and bookmaker who incorporates digital mixed media. She is Professor Emeritus at Massachusetts College of Art and the author of Book + Art: Handcrafting Artists' Books. She was the inaugural Salzberg Artist in Residence. Her creative project was a limited edition book, based on the works of Florida environmentalist and writer Marjorie Stoneman Douglas, titled River of Grass.