Artistic style Blassingame's work in mixed-media, bookmaking, printmaking, and flag-making employs elements of
Concrete poetry and uses books and physical artifacts to provide the viewer with a tactile interaction with the conversation around racism in the United States. Blassingame has also been active in scholarly understanding and symposia exploring the history and production of Black books and bibliographia. In an interview in 2020, Blassingame reflected on her upbringing and how coming from "a fairly bookish family" surrounded her with book arts in many forms, especially books of, by, or about Black creators. In this same interview, the artist speaks about trying to use the distinct possibilities of book arts and printmaking to reach readers for a discussion of historical and contemporary race and racism.
Selected exhibitions Blassingame has exhibited throughout the U.S., including: • 2014 "The Exact Measure of Cruelty: Slavery and Racism in Artists’ Books",
Milner Library,
Illinois State University • 2018
Mourning/Warning, Atkinson Gallery,
Santa Barbara City College. In this exhibition, Blassingame provides a look into her experience as an African-American woman. • 2018
Text & Textile, Art and Architecture Library at
Yale University • 2019
Playing with Words at the
Minnesota Center for Book Arts (MCBA) • 2019
I Am Mourning/Warning, Morey Family Gallery at Art Reach of Mid-Michigan • 2019
Umbra: New Prints for a Dark Age at
International Print Center • 2020
I AM/YOU ARE,
Berea College. In her art book, Blassingame comments on her experience as an African-American woman through the medium of printmaking. She also offers insight into experiences of
police brutality, violence and humiliation through the lens of being African-American. • 2020
Intersections: Book Arts as Conversion at
Tulane University • 2022
Troubling: Artists’ Books that Enlighten and Disrupt Old Ways of Being and Seeing at
Bainbridge Island Museum of Art • 2023
Paper Is People: Decolonizing Global Paper Cultures at Minnesota Center for Book Arts and San Francisco Center for the Book == Further reading ==