Title | We Fold Open the House |
Artist / Creator | Ahnika Wood |
Artist's Nationality | United States |
Place of Publication | Portland OR |
Publication Date | 2024 |
Author of Text | Ahnika Wood |
Process / Technique | Screen print, laser print |
Number of Images | 25 |
Structure / Binding | Coptic stitch |
Medium / Materials | Assorted secondhand papers (aged glassine, tissue, tracing, drafting, and drawing papers), linen thread |
Paper Stock | 70lb offset paper |
Number of Pages | 92 |
Dimensions (WxHxD) | 8.5 x 10 x 0.75 inches |
Signed & Numbered | Signed and numbered edition |
We Fold Open the House by Ahnika Wood
We Fold Open the House is a self-published artist’s book rooted in queer ritual and the act of archiving as a transformative practice. Through poetry, it reflects on the emotional process of piecing together and releasing kinship in times of collective turmoil. I drew from several years of personal journals and handwriting archives, treating them as raw material. To honor the life in these initial transmissions, I screen-printed them onto collected papers, presenting words as both sensory and gestural moments. These moments, layered into the text, transpose embodied and adaptive forms, echoing the fluidity of queer self-presentation. Repetition, misregistration, and spaciousness invite reflection on precarious becoming. Hand stitching throughout the book underscores the labor - it also allowed me to have a final passage to process the past through construction.
Artist Bio
Ahnika Wood (1996) is an interdisciplinary artist working primarily in textile and text-based modalities. In the embodied knowledge of fiber arts traditions, they reflect on the nature of relationships, from the personal to the elemental. Ahnika moves as a weaver, using opposing axes of feeling to form interfaces for communication. They explore themes of coding, word, and body to demonstrate webs of connection and disintegration. They hold a BFA in Fibers from Savannah College of Art and Design and currently reside in Portland, Oregon. Ahnika has worked across textile and art industries and are increasingly focused on reaching their local community through arts education. They have taught at organizations such as The Independent Publishing Resource Center, Wildcraft Studio School, Multnomah Arts Center, and Stelo Arts.