A series of
self-photos taken in June 2014 are the basis for a sheet of 28 artistamps
simply titled "FluXus Identity," exploring different ways of seeing
and being seen.
Wednesday, July 30, 2014
Artist Self-Portrait
We met our dear mail art friend buZ
blurr for the first time in person at the Ex Postal Facto (XPF) exposition held
in San Francisco in February 2014. From photographs taken of several of the
participants, buZ later produced a set of unique images on artistamps of
various artists who were present at XPF, and sent us a copy of the set. We took
buZ's image of yours truly, resized and cropped it, and released it as a
Cascadia Artpost artistamp. Thank you, buZ, for creating this and the other
likenesses, reminding us of the fond memories and fun we all had at XPF.
Peeps
A few years
ago while still living in the Ballard neighborhood of the city of Seattle,
Washington, we would take five-mile walks in the morning three or four times a
week. Our walking path was a big oval, northward through a residential
neighborhood called Loyal Heights, westward down several flights of stairs and
walkways to a public beachfront park at Shilshole along Elliot Bay, then
southward along the urban Burke-Gilman trail, across a railroad spur track and
over a railroad bridge back to our residence. While walking the first segment
through Loyal Heights, I passed a house where one of the residents staged small
action figures in changing scenes along the top of a retaining wall.
I became
fascinated in the miniature dramas I saw and decided to order some miniature
people of my own, which I called "peeps." These small figures were
HO- and O-gauge scales intended for model railroad layouts. I would add several
of my peeps to the settings on the retaining wall. Sometimes they would stay in
the same place for days, but sometimes I would walk by to find my peeps in
different positions, and other times my peeps simply disappeared.
I began to
set one or more peeps in different locations along the urban trail portion of
my walking route, where I found low retaining walls along the trail. Later I
documented the location of my peeps with photos. Quickly I discovered that my
peeps would have longer lifespan if I placed them in less obvious locations
along the busy trail, otherwise they would be gone after a day or two.
After moving
to Olympia, I wondered whether any of my peeps had survived in the urban
jungle. One year later, on a trip to Seattle, I decided to make a diversion and
drive to the trail to see if any of the peeps were still in place. Of the four
locations I checked, I found one peep still sitting on his tiny bench at the
spot where I had originally placed him. I decided to bring him back to Olympia
with me.
So now the
peeps are the subject of a series of artistamps. I selected the best photos and
highlighted the settings of the peeps by using a graphic technique called a vignette to crop their photos.
I am considering
some new future projects that will feature peeps. Photographing peeps in urban settings
is not a new idea - for example, see the various books published by the street artist
Slinkatchu. The peeps exert an emotional force on me that is not surprising. "The feeling of being ignored and
overlooked, of feeling small, is a universal one," says Slinkachu.
"It is as easy for us to fall through cracks in the pavement in a big city
as it is for the little people." Stay tuned for more peep adventures that become
reports to the Eternal Network.
Commodity Civilization II
As a
followup to the American Values artistamps created last year, we created a
second collage out of newspaper advertisements and magazine clippings with the
title "Commodity Civilization II." So much of American life is a
preoccupation with acquiring material goods, and of course advertising images
and messages are omnipresent in all media as constant accompaniment. The
American cultural historian Jackson Lears has coined the term "commodity
civilization" to described what has been called the American Way of Life.
Can we imagine another future where human relationships rather than commodity
acquisition might be valued more highly?
Spurned by the Panopticon
The Eternal Network extends even to
prison. However, mail restrictions forbid certain items used in mail art
correspondence that we outside the world of panopticons take for granted. We
discovered that rubber stamps are one of those forbidden categories. When
Cascadia Artpost attempted several times to mail several unmounted rubber
stamps to correspondent Colin Scholl, the envelope came back to us with a
sticker and hand-written message. We decided to create a postcard with a photo
of the returned envelope that we titled "Spurned by the Panopticon."
On the front of the postcard is a "Fluxus Prison" artistamp designed
by Colin that was printed on perforated stock by Cascadia Artpost. Perhaps
someday you will find mail franked with one of these artistamps or another
inscribed "CS MAIL" delivered direct from the panopticon.
Summer Flowers
In the Cascadia region of North
America, the Summer Solstice marks the longest day of the year, when the sun
does not set until 9:30 p.m. and twilight lasts until 10:30-11:00 p.m. What
better way to mark this milestone than with a set of Summer Flower artistamps.
With two exceptions noted below, photographs of flowers grown in personal
gardens over several seasons in the Seattle area were used to create fourteen
different artistamps. Several artistamps along with a small envelope of
wildflower seeds were mailed in a packet to correspondents on 2 June 2014.
The following flowers are represented
on the stamp sheet (listed from left to right, top row first):
·
Delosperma cooperi: Common name: Ice plant. A low-growing
succulent with brilliant, shining purple flowers, striking in a patio pot.
Likes full sun. Blooming period: July-August.
·
Beesia Calthifolia: Heart-shaped glossy bronze green
leaves with white blooms. Prefers part-shade and moist soil. Blooming period:
Spring to fall.
·
Coreopsis auriculata 'Elfin Gold': Golden-yellow daisy-like flowers on
compact plant with small green leaves. Drought tolerant in full sun to partial
shade. Blooming period: Late spring to summer.
·
Delphinium 'Komestead': Common name: Larkspur. Luminescent
bluish flowers and long green stalks. Prune to ground after first bloom to get
a second bloom in late summer. Grows in full sun to partial shade. Blooming
period: Summer.
·
Geranium 'Jericho': Miniature 6 to 8 inch tall bushy
growth with white edged green leaves with irregular green and pink centers, and
beautiful salmon-pink flowers. Slow-growing in full sun to partial shade.
Blooming period: Summer.
·
Dianthus chinesis 'Floral Lace Mix': Lacy pink and scarlet flowers that
are attractive to hummingbirds. Grows in full sun to partial shade. Blooming
period: Summer to early fall.
·
Echinacea 'Harvest Moon': Yellow-orange flowering perennial
that prefers full sun. Blooming period: Summer.
·
Brunnera macrophylla 'Jack Frost': Heart-shaped frosty leaves with
green borders and narrow green veins have a showy appearance year-round and is
a vigorous grower. Flower stalks have small blue flowers. Grows in full sun to
partial shade. Blooming period: Late spring to August, if dead blooms are
pruned.
·
Coreopsis 'Show Stopper': Covered in bright rose-pink flowers,
this perennial grows to 20 inches tall in full sun to partial shade. Blooming
time: Late spring to first frost.
·
Papaver somiferum: Coimmon name: Poppy. Annual with
papery pink blossoms with carmine rays and yellow center. Likes sandy soil and
full sun and tends to self-seed for the next season. Blooming time: Late spring
to early summer. [Note: This was one of two flowers not from a personal garden;
this specimen was photographed next to a fence in an industrial area in south
Seattle, Washington state, USA.]
·
Primula candelabra: Common name: Candelabra primrose.
Rosette-forming purple-carmine flowers on mealy white stems with lance-toothed
green foliage, growing up to 2.5 feet tall. Prefers moist soil. and partial
shade. Blooming period: Summer.
·
Linum perenne: Herbaceous perennial with showy sky
blue flowers growing 1-2 feet tall. Blooms profusely in full sun to partial
shade and is drought-tolerant. Blooming period: May-June. [Note: This is the
other flower not from a personal garden; this specimen was photographed along
the Burke-Gilman urban trail in the Ballard neighborhood of Seattle, Washington
state, USA.]
·
Potentilla recta: Perennial blooming bush with yellow
flowers. Prefers moist soil with fresh compost in spring in full sun. Blooming
period: Late spring to early fall.
·
Erigeron glaucus 'Bountiful': Common name: Beach aster. Wide
lavender daisies with chartreuse centers grow on gray-green evergreen foliage.
Cold hardy and continuously blooming if dead blooms are pruned. Grows in full
sun to partial shade. Blooming period: Spring to fall.
By Overnight Post
On 21 June 2013, the night of the
Summer Solstice, we observed a stormy sky with a full moon shining through
moving clouds. From our apartment balcony, we held our camera and took multiple
shots. Later, when we were reviewing our
photographic catalog for potential mail art subjects, the image of the Summer
Solstice Moon and brooding clouds seemed perfectly suited for the Cascadia
Artpost "By Overnight Post" artistamp.
Unfortunately, due to service
reductions by the United States Postal Service, the only overnight mail service
available to us here in Olympia, Washington U.S.A. is for mail traveling to the
Seattle metropolitan area, 70 miles north, and to correspondents such as Test
Tower in Chehalis, about 25 miles to the south.
The Walnut Tree
On the
occasion of the Ben Bir Ceviz Ağaciyim Mail Art Exhibition held in Istanbul,
Turkey in Spring 2014, Cascadia Artpost created a miniature artistamp sheet on
the exhibition theme "Yes, Walnut Tree is watching us," a line taken
from a poem by Nazim Hikmet. The image selected for the artistamp is a photo of
a moss and lichen-covered wooden railing seen at the Nisqually National
Wildlife Refuge, located near Cascadia Artpost's home in Olympia, Washington. Thank
you to Meral Ağar for inviting us to participate.
Spring Clouds
Sometimes when you go outside, you look up and the sky catches your attention with some unusual cloud formations. We saw these cloud ridges and took some quick pictures. The time was a sunny January morning, but these clouds seemed to be harbingers of spring with their lively movement across the sky. Therefore, we call the four artistamps our spring cloud set.
These artistamps were reproduced on an inkjet printer rather than our usual laserjet machine. We happened to have a partial box of glossy coated perforated paper stock, but when we tried to print one of the glossy sheets with the laserjet, the paper jammed. The inkjet printer handled the glossy paper just fine. Although the images were less sharp, we found we liked the effect of the ink bubbling on the sheet.
These artistamps were reproduced on an inkjet printer rather than our usual laserjet machine. We happened to have a partial box of glossy coated perforated paper stock, but when we tried to print one of the glossy sheets with the laserjet, the paper jammed. The inkjet printer handled the glossy paper just fine. Although the images were less sharp, we found we liked the effect of the ink bubbling on the sheet.
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