BETWEEN THE FOLDS Screens in Grand Rapids With Paper Folders

Producing Partners are local community organizations that co-present Community Cinema screenings across the country. Last night, Producing Partner WGVU Television & Radio in Grand Rapids, MI, screened the Independent Lens film BETWEEN THE FOLDS. The film looks at fine artists and theoretical scientists who have abandoned careers and scoffed at hard-earned graduate degrees to forge unconventional lives as modern-day paper-folders. Emily Maurin of WGVU gives her take on the event below:

Rodger Despres, a local paper folder, displays a 45-foot long paper model train that took him 1,500 hours to construct.

Following the screening, audience members tested their skills by making paper folded dogs.

What a great night! We were extremely lucky to have two amazing paper folders with us––Richard Alexander, one of the film’s participants, and Rodger Despres, a local paper folder who has constructed a 45-foot long paper model train. They each offered a different perspective on paper folding. Richard spoke about his artwork through Origamido, as well as his experiences making his own paper, which is beautiful on its own!

Rodger discussed how he has used paper to engineer working train cars and tracks. He was very excited since Richard was the first paper folder he had met! They talked about how paper folding is almost a secret society that is just now emerging as a mainstream art.

Richard impressed the audience with his butterfly ball, constructed of 12 pieces of folded paper. When he tossed the ball in the air and struck it, the ball became 12 fluttering butterflies. He then taught me how to put it back together using “storygami,” a way to work through the steps, but I haven’t had the guts to smash it up yet.

Following a short discussion about the types of origami, and how they relate to other fields like math and science, we moved into the lobby.

Rodger had several of his train cars on display and Richard had brought along a folded alligator, which started out as a 6′ x 6′ piece of paper. Rodger had quite a crowd to look at his train, and he explained the work that had gone into it–approximately 1,500 hours!

Richard brought patterns that guided people through, ending up with little black and white dogs.

There were some great comments from people about the evening and the film, that included “jaw droppingly beautiful,” “blown away – absolutely fascinating”

Though, possibly my favorite was from a 4-year-old who came to the event with her dad, “They made birdies and duckies.”

Indeed they did!

-Emily Maurin
WGVU Marketing Coordinator and Community Cinema Producing Partner

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Wednesday, November 4th, 2009 Community Cinema, Independent Lens
  • richardalexander

    Thanks for the wonderful blog! I had a great time in Michigan, as usual, and although Roger has not met them yet, there are many excellent paperfolders nearby. For those of you who were not present for the Q & A, I do want to give proper credit to the creators:

    The “Butterfly Ball” I exploded on stage is the creation of a Michigan artist, Kenneth Kawamura of Ann Arbor. The American Alligator “Snap” was designed by my partner, Michael LaFosse, but folded by both of us (50 hours) from handmade paper that I custom made for this specific design. Michael's first alligator, “Clamp” will be on display, with dozens of other origami animals and plants of the Southern Florida ecosystem, at the PGA tournament in Palm Beach (first week in January '10).
    Finally, “Kanji the origami Dog” is my own creation from 2006, the Year of the Dog in the Chinese Zodiac, designed as a tangible ad for the Animal Rescue League of Boston. The graphics for the printed sheet is the work of Greg Mudarri, who also wrote a chapter in the Japanese Paper Crafting book, and did the wonderful layout on the LaFosse Butterfly System of Design that I wrote (now in kit form through Tuttle, and on DVD through Origamido.com)

  • richardalexander

    Thanks for the wonderful blog! I had a great time in Michigan, as usual, and although Roger has not met them yet, there are many excellent paperfolders nearby. For those of you who were not present for the Q & A, I do want to give proper credit to the creators:

    The “Butterfly Ball” I exploded on stage is the creation of a Michigan artist, Kenneth Kawamura of Ann Arbor. The American Alligator “Snap” was designed by my partner, Michael LaFosse, but folded by both of us (50 hours) from handmade paper that I custom made for this specific design. Michael's first alligator, “Clamp” will be on display, with dozens of other origami animals and plants of the Southern Florida ecosystem, at the PGA tournament in Palm Beach (first week in January '10).
    Finally, “Kanji the origami Dog” is my own creation from 2006, the Year of the Dog in the Chinese Zodiac, designed as a tangible ad for the Animal Rescue League of Boston. The graphics for the printed sheet is the work of Greg Mudarri, who also wrote a chapter in the Japanese Paper Crafting book, and did the wonderful layout on the LaFosse Butterfly System of Design that I wrote (now in kit form through Tuttle, and on DVD through Origamido.com)

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