




Through her paper marbling, Aušra Lazauskienė preserves an endangered, centuries-old craft. “My grandmother was a town photographer in Western Lithuania. My work today strongly resembles her photo development process back then,” she says. “Both practices include large containers filled with water and paper, from which an image emerges.” Yet, Aušra came to the craft out of curiosity, after witnessing the marbling process, which has now become a major part of her life. "I was drawn by the process. My amateur experiments paved the way to my studies," she says. Aušra learned the craft from the few remaining masters of paper marbling in Türkiye and the USA. Today, still enchanted by the marbling process, she recreates historical patterns found in old books, working with the same technologies and materials once used during the craft’s golden age in the 17th, 18th and19th centuries. “Everything in paper marbling is connected to time, history and preservation,” Aušra says.
Aušra Lazauskienė is an expert artisan: she began her career in 2011
Aušra Lazauskienė