For Aimee Lee, it started with books, making books, making artists’ books. Books that combined writing, imagery, and storytelling. This was at Oberlin College in the late 1990s. But the paper! Who made the paper?
In graduate school at Columbia College Chicago, she learned to make her own paper in the classic European way, pulp on mould, and to bind her books according to European tradition. And this was good. But there was Korean paper, hanji, that spoke to her family origins, and no one in the United States was making it. Japanese and Chinese methods were being practiced, yes, but Korean ways didn’t attract the same attention and respect. As was usually the case, Korea was “in the shadow” of these more culturally prominent nations.
So Lee went to…