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The Blood Book

The poem, “Where and How Blood Was Made,” by Chard deNiord; nine woodcuts, nine pochoirs, four drawings, and seven paintings by Michele Burgess. Text hand set in Bembo and printed letterpress by Nelle Martin on paper made by the Morgan Conservatory and Cave. Hand bound in vellum, buckram, and Cave paper over boards and housed in a clamshell box covered in silk. 18" x 23"; 62 pages. Edition of 30. Forthcoming 2021.

The Blood Book is the eleventh volume of the “Stratigraphic Archives” by Michele Burgess and elaborates on the poem “Where and How Blood Was Made” by Chard deNiord. It explores the provenance of human blood—a concentrate that evolved from the sea “where waters gathered to a clarity that was also sorrow,” its legacy in atavism, evolution, intelligence, and human behavior—as well as the horror and fascination we feel toward it in our collective memory. It includes the poem by deNiord, hand set in Bembo, and nine woodcuts, nine pochoirs, four drawings, and seven paintings by Burgess.
The seaweed forms, printed as pochoirs, were adapted and altered from Anna Atkins’s nineteenth-century cyanotypes of British algae, Dawson Turner’s watercolors from his book FUCI, published in 1808, and dried and mounted specimens prepared and sold by Mary Wyatt in 1834-1840. The engraving of the blood vessel system by Andreas Vesalius is from Vivae imagines partium corporis humani aereis formis expressae by Juan Valverde de Amusco, 1566. It was scanned from the primary source, made into a photopolymer relief plate, and printed letterpress.
The Blood Book will be published in the Winter of 2021. It was begun in the Summer of 2017 and completed under quarantine during the COVID-19 pandemic, the Black Lives Matter movement, and multiple deadly wildfres throughout the West due to climate change.

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