August 21, 2024

Bea's Paper Imaginarium


Written and illustrated by Rachael Speirs
Plumleaf Press
978-1-738165223
40 pp.
Ages 6-10
August 2024
 

With paper, Bea could do and be anything. She could take her baby sister Millie and the cat Waffles into space to explore. She could become a scientist studying amazing animals like the great sushi-cat i.e., Waffles wrapped in paper nori and fish. And she could be a storyteller who creates comic books.
From Bea's Paper Imaginarium, written and illustrated by Rachael Speirs
But then she runs out of clean paper. And when she goes to school, hopeful of finding some there, her teacher Ms. Abdul reminds her that, since it is the end of the school year, they would be using up what they had in the reusable paper scraps bin. This dismays Bea. She needs clean paper to make her art.
From Bea's Paper Imaginarium, written and illustrated by Rachael Speirs
When she finally does find a piece of paper, in the street no less, Bea's excitement transforms into anger when baby Millie makes it unclean with her scribblings. Realizing her overreaction and really observing the "damaged" paper, Bea sees new possibilities for the first time and delves into art made with found objects and less-than-pristine paper.
From Bea's Paper Imaginarium, written and illustrated by Rachael Speirs
Ontario's Rachael Speirs is best known for her art and specifically her collage-like art that blends paper with fabric, watercolours, gouache, acrylics and more to create stories. Her bio tells of the emergence of her own artistic creations from play at an early age, and this has inspired Bea's own journey of artistic development. I suspect that many artists find themselves stuck in one genre or medium without being compelled to try different ones like Bea was. She was convinced she needed clean paper to make her art. Fortunately a misstep by baby Millie takes her off of that limited path and gives her the opportunity to expand her imagination and create something different. 
From Bea's Paper Imaginarium, written and illustrated by Rachael Speirs
I wish you could see the textures of Rachael Speirs's artwork in Bea's Paper Imaginarium. There are bits of cut fabric and cardboard, and painted paper cut into the shapes of balls and hair and fish. You can even see where Bea has taped paper together. Rachael Speirs's art reflects authentically the art that a child might create: it's colourful, it's layered, and it's imaginative. It's the kind of art that comes from joy in the process.
From Bea's Paper Imaginarium, written and illustrated by Rachael Speirs
For teachers who want to encourage children to think outside the box in maker spaces or for parents who want to inspire originality and artistry, Rachael Speirs's picture book will help do both and without preaching about what children should or shouldn't do. Bea's Paper Imaginarium demonstrates the satisfaction that comes from designing and building and following your own path of creativity and seeing opportunities where only dead ends and misfortunes once resided.

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