THREE ZINES, 2025
1/ Gracia Haby & Louise Jennison
Juniper & the Berries
2025
Indigo Digital print zine
Edition of 100
A 21.5cm X 21.5cm, Turkish Map Fold zine used to create a sculptural book form from a single piece of paper. As you open the zine, the piece of paper unfolds so you can see the entire sheet. Printed with Indigo Digital White on 140gsm Earl Black stock.
Juniper & the Berries was created especially for Sticky Institute’s 2025 Festival of the Photocopier, where it was released into the wild from our stall on Sunday, the second day of the two-day bumper fair. The zine was inspired by our recent Wildlife Victoria rescue and the subsequent care of Juniper, the Ringtail possum, and her three ‘berry’-joeys.
Juniper & the Berries was also read aloud, as part of our Kids Pumpkin Storytime session, presented by NGV as part of the eleventh Melbourne Art Book Fair, on Saturday 17th of May, beneath Kusama’s Dancing Pumpkin.
It needs to be rotated in your hand, to be read in full.
From Juniper & the Berries
We’d arrived before dusk, so as to have enough time to walk around the surrounding area of the release site where we’d initially collected Juniper, an adult ringtail possum with a bub on board rescue case we’d responded, called in to Wildlife Victoria (WV). Caught in a domestic atrium, we spotted the case still up on the WV portal and thought we could lend a paw to her, and her not one, but three, it transpired berry-joeys. From her huddled on the ground position, one ‘berry’ was by the base of her tail, another beneath her chest, and the littlest of all, smooth-furred and in her pouch, visible first as an apricot-hued tail curled to form a ring.
Now that Juniper was rested, her nose returned to a healthy pink, and she and her joeys had been examined by the WV vets and given the green light, it was time to get the family back to their home, before someone else moved in. The residential area was pleasingly, reassuringly full of possum food trees, and there was a small park replete with a native garden. We spotted trees that had their crowns evenly nibbled, and a fence line that meant that with relative, late-night ease, were you a possum, you could get to the lower, lush plantings. This has been one of the loveliest parts of wildlife care: seeing a new world open, a parallel universe, almost, before your eyes, as you look for signs of where a possum would go, and what would they eat. We look at the connecting canopies, the overhead powerlines, the means of getting from place to place in the arboreal world. Above our heads, another landscape. Side by side, a secret world we could easily miss, if we failed to read the signs.
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2/ Gracia Haby & Louise Jennison
(Imagined) field notes
2025
Indigo Digital print zine
Edition of 75
Collage created for World Book Night (WBN) United Artists 2025 — Tell The Trees (Listen to the Trees)
Bower Ashton Library, University of the West of England (UWE), Bristol, UK
Thursday 3rd of April – Wednesday 30th of July, 2025
WBN 2025 is organised by Sarah Bodman and Linda Parr with significant book recommendations from Rachel Marsh and input from Nancy Campbell.
Especially for World Book Night, we created (Imagined) field notes, a single-sided A4 sized celebration of trees in the form of a zine that can be printed, folded, and cut upon receipt, and read. When printed and folded, the zine is 10.5cm (h) by 7.5cm (w), though, that said, it needs to be open to read the beneath-the-canopy text. It is currently being shown in a forest of trees as part of an exhibition, Tell the Trees (Listen to the Trees), at Bower Ashton Library, UWE Bristol, UK, from Thursday 3rd of April, 2025.
(Imagined) field notes, in addition to being printed out and distributed as part of World Book Night 2025, has also be made into a zine of the same name, especially for the 2025 NGV Melbourne Art Book Fair (Friday 16th of May – Sunday 18th of May, 2025). (Imagined) field notes was also one of several zines and artists’ books we read aloud, as part of our Kids Pumpkin Storytime session, presented by NGV, on Saturday 17th of May, beneath Kusama’s Dancing Pumpkin.
A 21cm X 30cm (folded to 10.5cm X 7.5cm in proportion), full-colour zine.
It needs to be fully opened in order to be read in full.
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RELATED LINKS,
WORLD BOOK NIGHT 2025
NGV MELBOURNE ART BOOK FAIR 2025
LOOKING FOR GREEN, REMAINING HOPEFUL, WBN 2024
WE REMEMBER, WBN 2023
RECALL
RELATED POSTS,
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AND SOMETIMES, IF WE LET IT
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Tell The Trees (Listen to the Trees)
WBN United Artists invited responses to The Overstory by Richard Powers for an exhibition and mail art swap at Bower Ashton Library, Bristol, UK. We received over 200 works by artists from countries around the world including: Australia, Austria, Belarus, Brazil, Canada, China, Cyprus, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Singapore, Spain, Sweden, UK, USA.
Responses to the book developed our overarching theme — to look after our environment, listen to it and take care of it. Artists works have been created in praise of particular trees or forests and to campaigners and activists who work to protect them and engage others with caring for the environment. Many recalled their experiences of standing with trees and experiencing the peace of nature, being grateful for the restful space they provide.
Contributors celebrated the bounties received from trees as fruit bearers: Apple, Blackthorn, Chestnut and Quince. Native species are celebrated from Aotearoa and Wollemia trees in New Zealand to Ash trees in the UK, a Trembling Aspen near Banff, Alberta; a Tulip Poplar in Bucks County, Pennsylvania; a Mimosa tree in Winchester, UK. Works were made in response to Pine Trees ancient and new, Oak and Maple trees in New York state and across England and Wales, an ancient Ash tree in Yorkshire and Oak Tree in Greenwich Park, portraits of trees in Victoria Park, London, Cornish Magnolias announcing the coming of Spring, Nahua and Purépecha traditions, as well as the trees of their places of origin in Mexican states such as Guerrero, Guanajuato, and Michoacán in Mexico.
National parks, woods and forests that have offered shelter and space included: Highgate Woods and Wimbledon common in London; Kensington Gardens in Philadelphia, USA; Bingley valley in West Yorkshire; the Langdale valley, Cumbria; New South Wales, Australia; Speyside and Cairngorms National Park, Scotland; the Amazon rainforest, Brazil; the Marsh-Billings-Rockefeller National Historical Park, Woodstock, Vermont, USA; the Lucombe Oak tree in Widey Woods, Plymouth UK; the Haagse Bos, Netherlands (a zine printed by Ton Martens on the Korrex proof press at the Huis van het Boek).
World Book Night 2025 is organised by Sarah Bodman and Linda Parr, with input from Nancy Campbell and Rachel Marsh, and help from Marian Kilpatrick and Shaun Oaten.
WBN
3/ Gracia Haby & Louise Jennison
Here is something that might have happened I and II
2025
Collages and narrative, With a wingspan of a couple of books, a couple of centuries, created for The Earth is Us collaborative webzine for Earth Day 2025 organised by Jean McEwan
Tuesday 22nd of April, 2025
Since spending time in the collections of the Baillieu Library, University of Melbourne, and the State Library Victoria looking at luminous entomological studies from near and far, and behatted snails in the marginalia of medieval manuscripts, resplendent insects have been on our minds of late, so it came as no surprise that our The Earth is Us contribution of two collages and accompanying narrative should spring forth sporting a pair of wings of its own.
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With a wingspan of a couple of books, a couple of centuries
If I closed my eyes, I imagined the collection, stacked side by side, grew into each other, whilst closed, like tree roots and mycelium pathways, like arboreal canopies for wildlife and the passing of knowledge-ways. Through the pages, through the covers, through the archival casings, they grew together, shelf by shelf, row by row, the entomology section of rare books in the library. Perhaps they spanned out into nearby sections, early paleontological works in English, French, and German, and into the history of architecture, and interior design plates. Growing over man-made forms, and altering their scale in the process as they absorb periodical titles. A charm of butterflies in a dining room, a spring of insects in an entrance way, they grew over and greened all that was before them, when no-one was looking. Here is something that might have happened, skeetering about the margins.
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