I showed up to the five story studio and sometimes home of
Ali and Betul at 10:30 for a lesson in Turkish marbling (5 stories of about 10 square feet each
floor, think wide ladder instead of palace). Paper marbling is a process by which multiple colors of
paint are dropped onto the surface of treated water, mixed around to create a
pattern (though not mixed together)
and then transferred onto thin paper.
You see paper marbling at the beginning and ending of old books and it
looks like, well, multi-colored marble. My bookbinding teacher in Jerusalem was a paper
marbler and I’ve been fascinated by it for years though too intimidated to try
it myself. Turkey has a long history
of paper marbling with a unique brand of embellishment including flowers and
leaves.
"It's sometimes called painting
with water” Betul says to me
from her top floor studio where I am torn between jaw dropping views of
Istanbul and what’s happening in the seaweed thickened water on the table in front
of me. Betul makes it look easy
and while there is a kind of natural flow to raking and fanning the colors, my
lines are no where near as uniform as hers and my peacock pattern is laughable
– squished flat like a heavy sandwich instead of full like a balloon. But I thoroughly enjoy the afternoon
selecting colors, dropping them onto the sludgy water to see them expand and
moving them with metal awls and rakes of various sizes. I’m only kind of embarrassed when she
selects a generic artsy English language playlist on spotify that starts with
Simon and Garfunkel and includes many songs I already know. Is
my “type” so knowable? I think, being sure not to drip ox gall infused paint
onto my black jeans. But
then I don’t care and I discover what ultramarine looks like with powder blue
and crimson red.
(Ignore the "musical credits" in the end - observing copyright
law won out in the end. I am a librarian afterall. Just pretend you
are listening to The Flaming Lips..)
law won out in the end. I am a librarian afterall. Just pretend you
are listening to The Flaming Lips..)
“Why did you choose paper marbling?” Ali asks me, given the
other options of calligraphy, felting, tile painting and sedef – traditional
Turkish wood block carving and printing.
“Do they talk to you?
The colors, do they talk to you?”
Unsure of how to answer I cock an eyebrow towards Ali.
“They will. He
says. Send your husband away. They
won’t talk if he’s there. But send
him away and they’ll talk to you.”
Well, you heard the man Max.
It's not personal.
It's not personal.
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