This
example shows
a character
from the Cherokee
syllabary that
will be used
for the new
letterpress
at the Oconaluftee
Institute of
Cultural Arts
in Cherokee.
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Art comes in many forms and
the newest addition to Southwestern
Community College’s
Oconaluftee Institute of Cultural
Arts is actually old. It’s
a letterpress that will be
used to print books in the
Cherokee syllabary.
“We are bringing
back the Cherokee history
in true art form,”
said Luzene Hill, OICA progam
outreach coordinator.
Years ago the Eastern Band
published a newspaper called
Tsa la gi Tsu
lehisanunhi,
or the Cherokee
Phoenix. This
first Native American newspaper
was printed on a hot-type
letterpress in which each
word is put together by
hand, combining individual
metal letters or characters.
Through a $68,846 grant
from Cherokee Preservation
Foundation and a $47,792
grant from the Institute
of Museum and Library Services,
OICA will purchase a metal
press and develop a print-making
studio at its facilities
on Bingo Loop Road in Cherokee.
“It opens up a whole
new craft of Book Art for
us, including print making,
hand papermaking and hand
bookbinding,” said
Hill. “For our students
Book Art will blend fine
arts with crafts.”
Sequoyah, the inventor
of the Cherokee syllabary,
recognized that conveying
ideas in language was powerful
so he spent 12 years developing
the Cherokee syllabary,
completing it in 1821. Each
character represents a syllable,
instead of one sound, thus
the name syllabary. As in
the Phoenix
newspaper, the power of
the Cherokee language rises
through the printed word
on the page, transforming
from thoughts to art, Hill
explained.
“You already feel
the power of words but capturing
them in a book through individual
characters you’ve
laid out in hot type and
on paper you’ve made
from linen or hemp fiber
really helps you feel them
in an art form, too,”
said Hill. “To me,
binding a book- accordion-style,
for instance, is like producing
a piece of sculpture.”
As students learn to produce
first the paper and then
the books, they will also
learn skills such as precision,
technique, spacing and artistic
layout composition, said
Hill, who is consulting
with noted instructor Frank
Brannon. Brannon, who runs
his own letterpress studio
SpeakEasy Press in Dillsboro,
earned his master of fine
arts in Book Arts at the
University of Alabama and
has recently taught Letterpress
at the Penland School of
Crafts and Papermaking and
Printing at the John C.
Campbell Folk School.
“One of Frank’s
specialties is the Cherokee
Phoenix newspaper,”
said Hill. “He has
explored and published copies
from the original hand impressions
of type from the Phoenix,
found in a 1954 excavation
of the New Echota historic
site. He hand printed and
hand bound the publications
for exhibition.”
“The Phoenix
was a bi-lingual weekly
newspaper printed in parallel
columns in Cherokee and
English and one of its biggest
subscribers was the British
Library,” said Brannon,
who also teaches at Book
Works in Asheville. “Most
folks don’t know that
the paper was distributed
in Europe, too. The first
issue was published Feb.
21, 1828, using the 85 character
Cherokee syllabary completed
by Sequoyah just seven years
earlier,” he said.
The first paper that the
Phoenix
was printed on came from
Knoxville by wagon and it
took two weeks to arrive,
according to Brannon. The
last issue was published
in 1834, shortly before
the Cherokee removal to
Indian Territory in Oklahoma.
“Students will learn
the Cherokee history right
along with the history of
the letterpress,”
said Hill.
The Cherokee language will
also be incorporated into
the course since the books
can be published in the
Cherokee syllabary, she
added.
For more information, contact
Hill at 497-3945.
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