Upcoming!

Invisible Labors presentation at The Field Museum
A. Watson Armor III Research Seminar Series

Wednesday, February 28, 2024
noon - 1pm

The Field Museum is free on Wednesday and no in-person registration is required. A zoom link is provided on the page above for those who would like to attend virtually.


Invisible Labors: Reviving Histories of Women's Land Work in the Blue
Island Ridge Communities, Chicago, Illinois

Co-authored by Susannah Papish and Melissa Potter


photo: Tom Van Eynde

Preview a sample of Invisible Labors here.

Read a Review of Invisible Labors by Cheryl Ziegler in The Caxtonian, Journal of The Caxton Club, Nov/Dec 2023

Invisible Labors began as a project for the 2021 Terrain Biennial at boundary.  I love working with artists who envision different uses for this space, both outdoors and indoors. For the Biennial, I invited Melissa Potter to propose an idea for a garden project as she has done in other green-spaces in Chicago. She and I planted a garden that includes natural carbon remediators and pollinators such as milkweed, native seedlings, and rare native seeds, as well as plants whose fibers are suitable for use in hand-made, plant-based paper-making. 

After conversations with Potter and others involved with the history of The Ridge, the area now comprised of Beverly and Morgan Park neighborhoods in Chicago and Blue Island, just to the south, I became interested in how land in the south Chicago-land area had been used prior to industrialization. Through this dialogue I discovered  the rich, intermingled history of female land-keepers and stewards including Potawatomi women, gardeners and farmers, artists, and progressive educators who lived in the Ridge area. The more we talked, the more we became inspired to develop an artist publication devoted to this subject. 

The fascinating  and mostly under-discovered histories of these women and the manner in which land-keeping influenced their work are essential to the narrative of this publication; from the Potawatomi basket weavers who harvested the bark from Black Ash trees to create unique and soulful baskets, to the work of Louise Barwick, Kate Starr Kellogg, and Alice D. Kellogg, who were artists, farmers, and progressive educators in The Ridge area. For our collaboration, the title Invisible Labors has also come to signify the actual invisible labor and contributions that these women, along with many others, made to The Ridge area in the 19th and early 20th centuries. 

We worked with designer and artist Tamara Becerra Valdez, printer Jacob Lindgren of Inga Books, to create a limited edition artist book. This publication includes essays by myself and Potter, an interview with Potawatomi basket maker Kelly Church, archival photos, original artwork and Potter’s handmade burdock paper. This publication is a unique visual experience that mirrors the Invisible Labors garden design.

—Susannah Papish, Director, boundary

3-color risograph printed by Jacob Lindgren of Inga Books, Chicago, IL.
66 pages
Hand-bound accordion artists' book, 7.25. x 5.25 inches (closed dimensions)
2023


Edition of 100
50 deluxe, risograph with handmade burdock paper insert $250
50 regular risograph $200
included in both editions is a packet of 4 color postcards with reproductions of Alice Kellogg’s and Susannah Papish’s paintings.

Purchase via Venmo, Zelle, Paypal, Google Pay, Cashapp, at 773-316-0562. boundary can send an invoice via these payment platforms.

We are honored that Invisible Labors has been acquired by American Art and Portrait Gallery Library a Smithsonian Library, The Art Institute of Chicago (Ryerson and Burnham Libraries), Columbia College Chicago, DePaul University, Duke University Libraries, The Field Museum, Indiana University (Herron Library), Newberry Library, The School of the Art Institute of Chicago Design (Joan Flasch Artists Book Collection) Rhode Island School of Design, (Fleet Library), Ridge Historical Society, Smith College, University of Michigan, Virginia Commonwealth University, 6018North and several private collectors.

 

Susannah Papish and Melissa Potter in conversation with Invisible Labors designer Tamara Becerra Valdez, Fall, 2022.