Artists’ Books as Form and Idea: Collaboration brings visual art students back to the stacks

A composite image; in the main image a glass display case in a library shows several sheets of colorful marbled paper arranged flat, along with a small sign reading “VISA 376.” Two people (Sara Ellis at left, Dan Starling on right) stand beside the case observing it, with bookshelves and seating visible in the background.

For students from Assistant Professor Dan Starling’s most recent Visual Arts 376 course, this summer’s exhibit at the Music, Art and Architecture (MAA) Library easily earns an A+. That’s because the exhibit, developed with Art and Visual Literacy Librarian Sara Ellis, features artists’ books created by the students themselves.

This show is a first for the MAA Library, part of the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre. While exhibits typically feature library materials, this summer’s student display is the result of a long-standing and ongoing collaboration between the MAA Library, UBC Library’s Rare Books and Special Collections, and Prof. Starling.

Since 2021, students in Starling’s Visual Arts (VISA) 376 course have had the opportunity to explore artists’ books as a modern art format, including through a special class arranged with UBC Library.

“Visual artists often go to galleries to see and learn from other works. Our class about artists’ books goes to the library,” explains Starling.

A colorful print form of illustrations from the VISA 376 class, in black, white, and blue.

For the special class of VISA 376, Ellis and Rare Books and Special Collections Librarian Chelsea Shriver select and share several artist books from the UBC collections. These books can range from works made with found materials (e.g. Dieter Roth’s Bok 3b und bok 3d), to limited edition objects from British Columbia artists (such as Image Bank Post Card Show) or notable international artists, as in the case of Henri Matisse’s Jazz. Each can be requested for viewing from UBC Library at any time.

“Bringing my students to view the artist books in the UBC collection provides a different and hands-on kind of experience,” says Starling. In fact, it’s often a source of inspiration.

Having engaged with the diversity of artist books in UBC’s collection, students are challenged to create their own for the course assignments and final grade. The result from the most recent semester led to the summer exhibit at MAA Library.

The MAA displays include student creations from three course projects: multiple versions of a collaborative class book inspired by modernist poet Raymond Roussell’s New Impressions of Africa (1932); a project on considering the book as object; and an additional class book inspired by William Blake’s Songs of Innocence and of Experience (1794).

For Ellis, sharing the artist books in UBC’s collection with the class each year, as well as putting together the exhibit, has been its own unique experience.

“Taking out the artist books for the class really exposes the students to this format and invites their curiosity. I can see connections being made and how different artist books resonate with students as they engage in critical thinking about them,” says Ellis. “But I don’t usually get to see the final projects that were informed by those materials. Putting together this exhibit was like seeing Professor Starling’s class come full circle.”

Starling adds, “I think it’s important that the students get to encounter the physicality of materials to inspire their learning. The UBC librarians help expose the students to materials that they might not otherwise know to look or ask for, and there’s something very liberating about that experience for everyone.”

The exhibit, Artists’ Books as Form and Idea, will be on display on the 3rd floor of MAA Library until the fall.

Other artists’ books in UBC’s collections that have been highlighted in the special class of VISA 376 have included:

from the Music, Art and Architecture Library:

from Rare Books and Special Collections:

and more.

2026 UBC Undergraduate Prize in Library Research award ceremony

Cara Suchomel, Avni Kant, Nathan Daykin, Lara Vaziri and Oluwadabira Omotoso with Dr. Susan E. Parker, University Librarian.

Cara Suchomel, Avni Kant, Nathan Daykin, Lara Vaziri and Oluwadabira Omotoso with Dr. Susan E. Parker, University Librarian.

On May 12, winners of the 2026 UBC Undergraduate Prize in Library Research celebrated their awards with faculty, donors and other members of the community. The event was hosted by Dr. Susan E. Parker who was joined by other speakers including Dr. Sabina Magliocco, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology and Aleteia Greenwood, Associate University Librarian, Research & Scholarship.

“I am pleased to share that this year we received an outstanding group of research statements from across UBC Vancouver and UBC Okanagan, representing diversity and excellence in undergraduate scholarship,” says Dr. Parker. “Of this year’s applicants, five student research statements stood out for their thoughtfulness and exceptional use of library resources.”

Nathan Daykin, Lara Vaziri, Avni Kant, Cara Suchomel and Oluwadabira Omotoso speaking about their projects.

Nathan Daykin, Lara Vaziri, Avni Kant, Cara Suchomel and Oluwadabira Omotoso speaking about their projects.

This year’s winners include:

  • Nathan Daykin, 5th year Faculty of Arts student, won a $3,000 prize for his reflective statement on his project, “Word, Line, and Blank Space: Hyphenated Line Endings in Robert Creeley’s Poetry.”
  • Avni Kant, 4th year Faculty of Arts student, won a $2,000 prize for her reflective statement on her project, “Accessing Empire: Puck Magazine and the Making of a ‘Benevolent’ Conquest of the Philippines.”
  • Lara Vaziri, 5th year Faculty of Arts student, won a $2,000 prize for her reflective statement on her project, “Resilience in Motion: Understanding the Antidepressant Effects of Exercise in Individuals with Adverse Childhood Experiences.”
  • Oluwadabira Omotoso, 5th year Faculty of Science student at UBC Okanagan, won a $1,500 prize for her reflective statement on her project, “Bugspyter: Detecting Code Bugs in Jupyter Notebooks Using Large Language Models.”
  • Cara Suchomel, 2nd year Faculty of Arts student, won a $1,500 prize for her reflective statement on her project, “To the Moon and Away from Home: The Cost of a National Dream.”

Students and their instructors provided short presentations about their projects, highlighting their effective and innovative use of library services, information experts and resources provided by UBC Library. The ceremony was followed by a reception for guests to meet the winners and learn more about their projects.

Guests meeting the winners and asking them questions about their project.

Guests meeting the winners and asking them questions about their project.

Congratulations to Nathan, Avni, Lara, Oluwadabira and Cara!

Learn more about the UBC Undergraduate Prize in Library Research and how you can apply for the 2027 prize.

Asian Heritage Month 2026 – Asian Canadian Collections Round-Up!

Portrait of Yip Sang, the “unofficial mayor” of Chinatown, 1920s, Chung Collection, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0355154
Norman Kwong, ca. 1955, Chinese Canadian Stories Collection, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0367697
Family photograph taken at Greenwood, B.C., 1942, Japanese Canadian Photo Collection, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0049116

In honour of Asian Heritage Month, we are rounding up some of our best collections that tell the stories of Asian Canadians in Canada and beyond. Over the years Open Collections has digitized multiple collections that deserve to be highlighted and information on these collections is scattered across our Digitizer’s Blog. Hopefully, this post can be a guide for anyone hoping to navigate these collections and find new stories.

For more information on all our Asian Studies related holdings this previous blog post is an excellent place to start! We’ve also included links to older blog posts about some of these collections.  Hopefully one or more of these collections sparks your interest this Asian Heritage Month!

Table of Contents

Chinese Canadian Stories Collection

Photograph of Rhoda Chow (又名 Rose Lee) 站在丈夫 Chiang Kai Lee (又名 Sing Lee) 手抱女兒, and baby Lillian Lee 的合照, August 10, 1928, Kamloops Cultural Association subcollection, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0367586
Letter to Ma Jiexiu from his uncle], Letter addressed to the writer’s nephew regarding the purchase of land, 1930, Wah Shun Company sub-collection, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0367733

The Chinese Canadian Stories collection gathers items from UBC Library, SFU Library, City of Vancouver Archives, Community Historical Recognition Program (CHRP) community partners, and other community contributors.

The collection currently has 10 sub-collections each focusing on different snapshots of Chinese Canadian History.

  • Chinese Canadian Military Museum Society – Photos, records and other materials related to Chinese Canadian military families and service members from 1924-2011.
  • Louie Papers – A collection of WWI records from the Louie Family dated 1918-1929.
  • Chock On Fong Fonds – Records relating to the Wo Chock On Fong Association of Vancouver, a local labour and community centre that operated from the 1910 to the 1980s
  • Gorsebrook Research Institute (GRI) for Atlantic Studies – A collection of 93 items that follow the history of early Chinese families in the Canadian Maritimes from the 1900s to 2012
  • Henry Lock-tin Lee Collection – A collection of journals, portraits and other materials from Henry Lock-tin Lee, who was a member of the Kuomintang (KMT), or Chinese Nationalist Party, and a traditional Chinese medicine doctor. Includes materials from 1916-1970.
  • Initiative for Student Teaching and Research in Chinese Canadian Studies (ISTRCC) – A collection of 54 video interviews with Chinese Canadians about their family history and lives in Canada.
  • Kamloops Chinese Cultural Association– A 60 item collection based on the histories of five Kamloops and British Columbia families: Dang, Kong, Lee, Lim, and Marr between 1912 and 2012.
  • Norman Kwong Collection – A collection focused on the life and work of Norman ‘Normie’ Kwong, a Chinese Canadian Hall of Fame athlete, sports executive, and  Lieutenant Governor of Canada between 1948 and 1985.
  • Ron Bick Lee Fonds – The family records of the Lee family, including those of Ron Bick Lee and Foo Hung Co from 1959 to 1993.
  • Wah Shun Company Fonds – A collection of records created or received by the Wah Shun Company of Vancouver from 1919-1938.

Some previous blog posts which might be interesting or helpful when navigating this collection include:

A selection of some more items from the collection:

李樂天和孟義的照片 = Portrait of Lock Tin Lee and Meng Yi]; [李樂天和孟義的照片], October 1952, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0367628
Photograph of Ron Bick Lee and his wife Zhen Qiongchun; 李日如與甄瓊春合影, taken at Wand Studio. [Date Unknown], Bick Lee sub-collection, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0367055
“A New Zealand Corporal whom I spent part of my leave with. On bridge over Forth Edinburgh” from the Louie Papers, ca. 1920s, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0367674

Japanese Canadian Photograph Collection

The Japanese Canadian Photograph Collection (JCPC) was assembled by UBC Library’s Rare Books and Special Collections from various donors beginning in the 1970s and is a part of UBC’s larger archival Japanese Canadian Research Collection.

This part of the collection has been digitized for broader use and contains images of Japanese Canadians from the 1880s to 1985. It contains images of countless named and unnamed Japanese families, photos of the 1907 Vancouver race riot, and an extensive collection of photos showing Japanese internment camps, language schools, ghost towns, and current and former communities.

Bride (Nagami) and groom (Umeza) at Tashme Japanese Internment Camp, ca. 1940s, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0049221
Photograph of a Kendo tournament taken in Vancouver, BC, 1972, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0049028
Building damaged during Vancouver riot of 1907 – 431 Powell Street, 1907, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0048847

Some previous blog posts which might be interesting or helpful when navigating this collection include:

Punjabi Patrika Newspaper

The Punjabi Patrika, published in Abbotsford, BC, is one of only two bilingual Punjabi/English newspapers published in Canada and offers a unique lens into BC’s South Asian community.

An archive of the Patrika was donated to The Reach in Abbotsford by owners/publishers Andy and Pritam Sidhu. The Reach oversaw the digitization of the hard copy archives of the Punjabi Patrika from its beginning in October 1996 to 2014, and are hosted here on Open Collections. In combination with the Patrika’s currently published e-editions, there is now a fully digital and accessible archive of this paper available to the public.

Some interesting and potentially helpful blog-posts on this collection include:

Older editions of Punjabi Patrika:

Tairiku Nippō (Continental Daily News)

Page 1 of the Tairiku Nippō 大陸日報 (Continental Daily News), December 6, 1941, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0109441

This collection contains over 10,000 issues of the Pre-WWII Japanese-Canadian newspaper Tairiku Nippō (Continental Daily News), which was published in Vancouver between 1907 and 1941. The paper, predominantly written in Japanese, was an important source of information for Japanese immigrants to British Columbia.

It is an excellent source of information for those interested in learning more about Japanese Canadian communities in BC prior to WWII.

Assistant Professor of Teaching Ayaka Yoshimizu, as part of her “Sex and Migration in the Transpacific Underground” website, has made a series of translations of the newspaper entitled “Exploration of Devil Caves | 魔窟探検記.” These translations contain detailed stories of Japanese migrants operating and working at brothels at the turn of the 20th century in Canada.

Some interesting and potentially helpful blog-posts on this collection include:

Chung Collection

The Wallace B. Chung and Madeline H. Chung Collection is a collection of over 10,000 digitized archival documents, photographs, books and artifacts related to three broad themes: British Columbia History, Immigration and Settlement and the Canadian Pacific Railway Company. Donated in 1999 by Drs. Wallace and Madeline Chung, the Chung Collection is currently held at UBC Library’s Rare Books and Special Collections.

The collection includes include extensive materials related to immigrants, and a particularly strong emphasis on Chinese Canadian communities and the Canadian Pacific Railway. There are currently over 1,350 digitized items related to Asian experiences in North America that span from 1864 to 1989.

Mahjong set, 1920s, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0355047
Painting on foil, found in a Chinese Mother Goose rhymes book, May 14, 2026, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0366533
Wooden opium trade chest, containing opium layout, ca. 1900, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0355008

Many of the items in the collection are physical artifacts, many of which are on display in the Chung | Lind Gallery at the Vancouver Campus of the University of British Columbia.

Graduation portrait of Dr. Victoria Cheung, the first woman to graduate from the University of Toronto Department of Medicine, 1922, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0218234
Portrait of a Chinese Family, 1920s, Chung Collection, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0217128
Photo of the Vernon Armstrong Chinese Nationalist League, 1913, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0355161

Due to the vastness of the collection, we recommend you try the following advanced subject term searches when searching for materials related to Asian History:

  • Asian experience in North America
  • Chinese* – Searches all materials with “Chinese” in the subject
  • Japan* – Searches all materials with “Japan” or “Japanese” in the subject
  • Korea* – Searches all materials with “Korea” or “Korean” somewhere in the metadata

Some interesting and potentially helpful blog-posts on this collection include:

Yip Sang Collection

A digitized collection of over 630+ records from the City of Vancouver archives from the “unofficial mayor” of Chinatown dated between 1901 and 1919.

Yip Sang (1881-1927) was a businessman, political activist and social reformer who was one of the driving forces in the establishment of the Chinese Benevolent Association, the Chinese School and the Chinese Hospital (now Mount St. Joseph’s) in Vancouver.

Portrait of Yip Sang, 1920s, from the Chung Collection, https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0355154
[Letter, Wu Xin Chang to father Wu Weng Ze, informed that everyone in the family was fine and $10 was received, 1903], https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0114004
[Letter, from Song Lian Jiu, asking about transportation arrangement after entered the country, 1903], https://dx.doi.org/10.14288/1.0114008

The digital Yip Sang Collection includes hundreds of personal and business related letters, account books and ephemera related to Yip Sang’s family and commercial pursuits and the rest of the collection is held in the City of Vancouver Archives.

Some interesting and potentially helpful blog-posts on this collection include:

Hopefully one or more of these collections sparks your interest this Asian Heritage Month!

Additional Collections

Thank you for reading!

Closed Victoria Day – Monday, May 18th

New Books at the Law Library – 26/05/12

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE787.A7 O68 2024
A.H. Oosterhoff, R. Chambers & M. McInnes, Oosterhoff on Trusts, 10th ed (Thomson Reuters Canada, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE850 .F75 2024
J.W. Neyers, ed. et al. Fridman's the Law of Contract in Canada , 7th ed (Thomson Reuters Canada, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE3619 .D63 2023
M. Doelle & C. Tollefson, Environmental Law : Cases and Materials, 4th ed (Thomson Reuters, 2023).

LAW LIBRARY reference room (level 2): KE8808.5 .S78 2024
D. Stuart, S. Coughlan & L. Dufraimont, Learning Canadian Criminal Law, 16th ed (Thomson Reuters, 2024).

New in cIRcle: “Coming Home : curation, exhibition and research-creation as reclamation and truth-telling”

Photograph of Margaretta James' exhibition, titled Coming Home, at the Chung | Lind Gallery at Irving K. Barber Learning Centre. Photo shows a close-up of treasures and photographs shown in “My (Blended) Family” case.

Photo from: James, Margaretta. 2025. Coming Home : curation, exhibition and research-creation as reclamation and truth-telling (Page 9).

 

Elder Margaretta James’ thesis, Coming Home : curation, exhibition and research-creation as reclamation and truth-telling is available in cIRcle. In this thesis, James explores her personal and family history as paths to understanding and interrogating colonization, global migration, and kinship across cultures.

Alongside her thesis, James co-curated the exhibition, Coming Home, which was on display at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre in partnership with the Chung | Lind Gallery from May to July 2025. This exhibition, and the accompanying digital exhibit, wove James’ own stories together with family heirlooms, photographs, and historical artifacts to “[allow] visitors to immerse themselves in the stories in a way that a traditional written thesis cannot” (Institute for Gender, Race, Sexuality and Social Justice, 2025).

Looking for more?

Explore our ever-growing collection of theses and dissertations, or search in Open Collections for specific topics of interest.

References

Institute for Gender, Race, Sexuality and Social Justice. (2025, May 15). Elder Margaretta James: Coming Home. https://grsj.arts.ubc.ca/news/elder-margaretta-james-coming-home/

Further Reading

UBC Faculty of Arts. (2024, June 4). Transpacific connections with Mowachaht/Muchalaht Elder Margaretta James. https://www.arts.ubc.ca/news/transpacific-connections-with-mowachaht-muchalaht-elder-margaretta-james/

UBC Faculty of Arts. (2025, June 13). Reclaiming History : A new Asian-Indigenous exhibit explores the right to truth-telling. https://www.arts.ubc.ca/news/reclaiming-history-a-new-asian-indigenous-exhibit-explores-the-right-to-truth-telling/

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Event Recap: A conversation with Kanako Nishi and Allison Markin Powell 

On Friday, April 24th, acclaimed Japanese author Kanako Nishi sat down with translator Allison Markin Powell and UBC Asian Studies professor Christina Laffin for a conversation about her recently translated novel, Sakura. Originally published in Japanese in 2005, Sakura (さくら) is the first of Kanako Nishi’s novels to be translated and published in English. Sakura […]

New Books at the Asian Library (April 2026)

Punjabi Patrika : Local Newspapers as Windows into the Past

Local newspapers show what life was like at the time. They report on everyday events and issues, showing what people cared about. Ads and editorials reveal social values, the economy, and popular trends. They also reflect the opinions and biases of the people who wrote and read them, while showing how communities changed over time.

The Punjabi Patrika, published in Abbotsford, BC, is one of its kind. It has been one of North America’s leading Punjabi-English newspapers for nearly two decades, serving both the Punjabi community and English-speaking readers interested in Punjabi culture and news. The newspaper offers a unique perspective on South Asian communities in British Columbia. It began in October 1996 and continues to the present. UBC’s Open Collections provides a digitized version covering the years 1996 to 2014.

Below is a selection of content you can expect to find in the Punjabi Patrika. So diverse!

Here’s a look at some international news coverage:

From Punjabi Patrika, Volume 18, Number 26, 2014, featuring brief news on B.C. joining Mexico and France in carbon pricing.  

Newspapers like this provide a window through which we can explore the social conditions of immigrants, as seen in the stories of early Sikh pioneers.

From Punjabi Patrika, Volume 1, Number 1, 1996, the article “Recapitulating Our Pioneers” highlights the lives of early Sikh pioneers, emphasizing their struggles, resilience, and lasting contributions to community development.

More immigrant experiences through a Youth Column …

From Punjabi Patrika, Volume 1, Number 10, 1997, a Youth Column article highlighting a young Filipino student’s perspectives and experiences in Canada, praising its quality of life, opportunities, and multicultural society while acknowledging some social and economic challenges.

You will also find some meaningful life lessons …

From Punjabi Patrika, Volume 2, Number 10, 1998, featuring an article on the significance of forgiveness and its role in fostering inner peace, healing, and reconciliation.

You will also find resources for community members.

From Punjabi Patrika, Volume 5, Number 12, 2001, featuring an article on a B.C. program supporting foreign-trained professionals. It highlights the integration barriers faced by immigrants.

Practical health tips are shared

From Punjabi Patrika, Volume 9, Number 1, 2004, an article discusses foods to eat that may help reduce back pain.

Some practical stuff for parents and students.

From Punjabi Patrika, Volume 14, Number 48, 2010, offers practical back-to-school tips for students from primary to secondary levels.

Cultural celebrations that showcase the community’s vibrancy!

From Punjabi Patrika, Volume 16, Number 46, 2012, features a picture of the Bhangra competition winners.

You can even find news featuring birthday wishes for community members!

From Punjabi Patrika, Volume 17, Number 33, 2013, featuring birthday wishes from the families of Paul Singh Dhaliwal.

And of course, like any newspaper, it includes ads for everyday services and products.

From Punjabi Patrika, Volume 10, Number 13, 2006, featuring ads for phone plans. Have you used one of these phone models?

Thank you for reading!

Take a look at the blog post below to discover recipes from the Punjabi Patrika newspaper!

Recipes from the Punjabi Patrika Archive (2023)