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Graphic in teal background with yellow letters reading 20th annual student book arts exhibition

Book Arts Competition Winners

Special Collections & University Archives is excited to announce the winners of the 20th Annual Student Book Arts Competition! This year’s top honors were awarded to Rie Cauley for “Kumiko” and Mia Herrera for “We Are So Fortunate”.

The winning artist’s books were selected by David Benjamin, Head of Special Collections & University Archives, and guest judge Denise Bookwalter, Professor of Art at Florida State University. Selected from an impressive group of creative submissions, both works demonstrate exceptional craftsmanship, innovation, and artistic vision.

To celebrate their achievements, we sat down with Rie and Mia to discuss the inspiration behind their award-winning artist’s books, their creative processes, and their experiences exploring the Book Arts Collection at Special Collections & University Archives.

What inspired the idea behind your artist books?

Photo of Mia Herrera and Rie Cauley with their awards for winning the 20th annual Book Arts Competition. Behind them is the Gallery featuring all the entrants to this year's contest.

Mia: Well, I wanted to blend a lot of my focuses together, so printmaking, bookbinding and writing. I took creative writing as a minor when I was in school, so I wanted to blend all that together. And I think one of the best works that I tend to do is just from the heart. So I wanted to speak about my experiences and how to represent that through symbolic art as well. And putting that together was just really fun and finding the connections there.

Rie:  So I’m from Japan and I moved here in 2009. And financially, I can’t go back to Japan because I have four kids. So I started to appreciate where I grew up in Japan. I like to put Japanese culture into my work when I create art. My artist book “Kumiko” started in my independent study. In the artist book I made wooden pieces that can be designed together into an intricate pattern. Each piece is precisely cut and placed where it’s supposed to be like how I’m suppose to be here.

What message or experience do you hope viewers take away from your artist books?

Rie: I want people to see themselves as they’re important and needed where they are. Because sometimes you might feel alone, you’re still part of something that’s beautiful.

Mia: For me, it was very deliberate to do my writing in the second perspective, because I think when it comes to talking about experiences, it’s easy to kind of detach yourself. So doing it in the second person really makes the viewer feel that they are in my shoes and it is an experience that I don’t think everybody deals with. So, what I hope for people to take away is just considering what it’s like to be other people. I feel like that’s not always the case. Not everyone sits down and thinks about that often.

How has exploring the book arts collection in Special Collections & University Archives influenced your understanding of artist books?

Mia: I remember when I took the book arts classes, I honestly didn’t even realize what book arts were until I came to the Library Special Collections. I hadn’t seen such a variety of books, and I’ve always loved reading and I love books, but I didn’t realize how much of an art form it could become.

Photo of Mia Herrera's book art We Should Be So Fortunate. The book has a black cover with white symbology and is bound with hand sewn visible on the spine.
Photo of Rie Cauley's art book Kimiko featuring a permiter of dark reddish wood and the interior is composed of interlocking lighter wood pieces.

Rie: I also never knew about book art till I took the book binding class last semester, and then we visited Special Collections. It was like, Whoa! Each book was very inspiring to me. And I wanted to create a book that was a very interactive, so I have made pieces for my artist book “Kumiko” that can be moved around. I was very happy to learn about book arts and every special collection visit seeing different artist books made me think  “I can use this.”

What advice would you give students who are thinking about entering the book arts competition next year?

Mia: I would say to do it because I wasn’t going to initially. I was inspired, like my partner encouraged me to do it. And I thought that like my work wasn’t, I was like, oh, it’s not even worth it. But clearly it was. So my advice would be if there’s any hesitancy, just don’t listen to that part.

Rie: I agree. If you work hard for it. You should put it out there so people can see your work.

Lee Dotson in front of the Hitt Library.

Lee Dotson Selected for 2024 Digital POWRR Peer Assessment Program

Lee Dotson, Digital Initiatives Librarian and manager of STARS (Showcase of Text, Archives, Research & Scholarship), UCF’s institutional digital repository, has been accepted into the prestigious Digital POWRR Peer Assessment Program for the year 2024. POWRR stands for Preserving (digital) Objects with Restricted Resources. This program is sponsored by the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) and the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). 

The Digital POWRR Peer Assessment Program is an exclusive initiative that is designed to empower individuals to address the challenges of preserving digital assets, especially when faced with limited resources. Lee will engage with a cohort in a year-long comprehensive assessment process, collaborating to evaluate and improve digital preservation strategies and practices. Participants will work closely with peers and mentors, conduct an institutional case study, generate a longer peer assessment report, present findings through a final project showcase, and write a white paper that will be published.  
 

Participants also receive a participation stipend as well as a “Technology Start Up” award that can be provisioned towards helping to jump start digital preservation activities. 

Congratulations to Lee on this significant achievement! Her participation in this Program is an investment in both her personal and our organizational growth. The digital preservation skills acquired, coupled with her strengthened network and gained leadership capabilities, will contribute significantly to advancing the digital preservation efforts of the UCF Libraries and facilitate deeper collaboration with Special Collections and University Archives. 

Diamond's Hidden Gems

Diamond’s Hidden Gems – Special Collections & University Archives

Hello, everyone! My name is Diamond Williams; I am a second-year double-majoring in Criminal Justice and Writing & Rhetoric. Welcome to the ninth installment of Diamond’s Hidden Gems, a blog series in which I introduce you to the University of Central Florida’s library services that you may not have known about!

If you’re looking for a sixteenth-century book, artifacts from the early days of Walt Disney World, or the history of UCF, the UCF Libraries Special Collections & University Archives has what you need. Special Collections & University Archives (SCUA) houses the library’s rare, unique, and one-of-a-kind materials.

SCUA also provides an opportunity for students to showcase their art and potentially win a monetary prize. To learn more about the department, read on!

Special Collections contains original family papers, maps, photographs, oral histories, and more. You can view collections about: African Americana, Botany, Floridiana, Political Papers, Theme Parks, and more.

The University Archives holds materials on the University of Central Florida, formerly Florida Technological University, from its beginnings in 1963 to the current day. You can view collections about: Black Student Union History, University Branches, Offices, Services, and Programs, University Documents, and more.

UCF’s SCUA department holds an annual Student Book Arts Competition, in which students have the opportunity to showcase their handmade artists’ books and have them added to the permanent Book Arts & Typography Collection.

If you’d like to learn more about SCUA and the Book Arts Competition, visit Diamond’s Hidden Gems – Special Collections & University Archives in STARS.

Yellow background with three photos of handmade books and title "What are artists' books? in pink text

What Are Artists’ Books?

Join Chris Saclolo from Special Collections University Archives to learn about the craft of artists’ books (works of art in book form) and the history of the UCF Student Book Arts Competition. Students will get the opportunity to see some of the artists’ books from the Book Arts & Typography Collection.

Examples of artists’ books on display in the John C Hitt Library


Date: Monday March 21st
Time: 4:00 pm
Where: John C. Hitt Library Room 402

SCUA's 45 Years of Collecting Exhibit

Last Chance to See Exhibit: 45 Years of Collecting

There’s still time to see 45 Years of Collecting: UCF Libraries’ Special Collections and University Archives! This exhibit will be on display in the fourth floor gallery at John C Hitt Library. Please note the gallery IS open every weekday from 9am – 4pm. The lights are out until the door opens to preserve the collection but please do come in and visit!

This broad range of materials highlights the evolution of the library’s collection over the past 45 years.

It includes great UCF items like Daunte Culpepper’s football, Spirit Splash rubber duckie, Knightro squishy toy, Pegasus yearbook, and some Citronaut memorabilia.

Daunte Culpepper Football

Check out gorgeous handmade selections from our bookarts like Penumbra by Ke Francis.

Penumbra by Ke Francis

See the oldest item in our collection, a Vulgate Bible from 1546 or local central Florida memorabilia from old tourist pamphlets to Pulse Memorial inspired artworks.

The exhibit runs from February 2021 through April 2021 in the new 4th floor Special Collections & University Archives’ Gallery in the John C. Hitt Library.

For more information, email speccoll@ucf.edu.

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