Showing posts with label postage stamps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label postage stamps. Show all posts

Sunday, September 19, 2021

End of Summer Mail Bag

 



Get busy, leave town, and don’t go to the post office for a few weeks and the box was bursting with new mail art.    Zines + mail art, altered postcards, rubber stamping, fabric sample collages, Fleur’s ongoing documentation of Oakland public art, Kathy’s moving pieces and a more patrons of the Museum of Unclaimed Ephemera.  Some of Kathy Barnett’s pieces get hung on my apartment door to entertain my young neighbors.   Here is a list of the artist shown this month: 

  1. Eberhard Janke - Germany
  2. MiM – Virginia 
  3. Jean-Philippe Gilliot – Belgium 
  4. Valdor – Catalonia/Spain
  5. Pia Zaragoza – California
  6. Debra Mulnick – Idaho
  7. Carolyn Oord (aka Kerosene) – Québec/Canada
  8. Rani Goel – California 
  9. Fleur Helsingor – California
  10. Jon Foster – North Carolina 
  11. William Mellott – Taiwan 
  12. Skooter Fein – California 
  13. Patti Wren & Paula Currie – California
  14. Margo Hill – California
  15. Meral Agar – Turkey 
  16. Kathy Barnett – Missouri
  17. Gregg Biggs – Museum of Unclaimed Ephemera – California

Thursday, July 1, 2021

Envelopes and Postcards and More





The mail art that arrived this month included quite a few envelopes trying to upstage their contents.  Marina Salmaso sent a handmade envelope that needed to be disassembled to reveal a collage celebrating the 100thAnniversary of Joseph Beuys’ birth.   Thea Albert’s mail art needed to be assembled — and the box now is on one of my bookshelves.    The mail shown here includes: 

  1. Jon Foster – North Carolina 
  2. Carolyn Oord (aka Kerosene) – Québec/Canada
  3. Jennifer Utter – California
  4. Virgo – Russia 
  5. Deble Faulkner – California 
  6. Chocolatine et stooby – France 
  7. Serse Luigetti – Italy
  8. Meral Agar – Turkey 
  9. Margo Hill – California
  10. William Mellott – Taiwan 
  11. Gregg Biggs – Museum of Unclaimed Ephemera – California
  12. Maria Quiroga – Argentina 
  13. Marina Salmaso – Denmark
  14. Thea Albert – Washington State

Friday, May 21, 2021

May Mail




Sometimes with mail art the envelopes try to upstage the contents — and this month has seen a few examples of amazing envelopes in my mailbox along with some great contents.  Plus, I am noticing more and more postage stamps and artists stamps honoring, doctors, nurses and medical research.   I even hunted down some Jonas Salk postage stamps for the vaccine-themed mail art I sent out a few weeks ago.  

The mail shown here includes:

  1. Rebeka Torowin-Borowicz – U.K. 
  2. Wabi Sabi Sews – California
  3. Kathy Barnett – Missouri
  4. Jennie Hinchcliff – California
  5. The Sticker Dude – New York 
  6. R.F. Côté — Canada
  7. Peter Müller – Germany
  8. Margo Hill – California
  9. William Mellott – Taiwan 
  10. Fleur Helsingor - California 
  11. Katerina Nikoltsou - Greece
  12. Gregg Biggs – Museum of Unclaimed Ephemera – California

Friday, May 15, 2020

Postage Stamp Collages


Another round of handmade postcards are being mailed today.   Here are just a few from the series.

Monday, April 27, 2020

The Ugliest Art I Have Ever Made

For the last few weeks I have been using up my horde of old postage stamps to make an artist’s book.   As a rule, I have avoided using any postage stamps depicting dictators and despots.  A few obscure Warsaw Pact strongmen may have slipped in, but I have done my best.  I had a few hundred stamps featuring Francisco Franco — those were all put aside.  Most of the Spanish Franco stamps were orange.
I began by cutting and then reassembling them into a collage.  And then, something frightening happened when I looked at my work of art from across the room.
There he was emerging from the collage, the hideous, corrupt, demented orange dictator.
This is the ugliest work of art I have ever made.
The Orange Dictator, Mixed media on board, 8"x8"

Thursday, April 23, 2020

Stay Home, Make Art – Day 38

After all these colorful stamps it was time to tone it down, listen to Amy Winehouse’s Back to Black and do some mostly black and white pages.

Tuesday, April 21, 2020

Stay Home, Make Art – Day 36

Even though I don’t sew, quilting is in my DNA.  I have been inspired by quilting patterns and created quilt-themed art for many years.  Today some patchwork quilt postage stamp action.  

Monday, April 20, 2020

Stay Home, Make Art – Day 35

Blame it on those leftover Easter chocolates with their purple wrappers.  All sugared up and using some of the purple postage stamps today.

Thursday, April 16, 2020

Stay Home, Make Art – Day 31

I have long been fascinated by cutaway images of the earth showing different layers above and below ground.  Today’s version in postage stamps is not the first time I was artistically inspired by those layers.

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Stay Home, Make Art, Wave the Flag – Day 29

Today some pages of flag waving.  Having sorted through thousands of postage stamps, I can say the frequency of putting the flag on stamps is something uniquely American.  Sure, other countries have their flag on some stamps, but no country uses theirs so often as the United States. Personally, I’ve always been the sort of customer who asks for commemoratives and only buys flag stamps in a pinch.

Monday, April 13, 2020

Stay Home, Make Art – Day 28

The piles of stamps on the table are starting to get smaller.  So far, this project has 16 completed pages.

Sunday, April 12, 2020

Stay Home, Make Art – Day 27

I continue to use all my old postage stamps for this new artist’s book I am working on.  The pages I did for today are some pandemic postage where everyone in every stamp is wearing a mask.  Years from now, this will be a reminder of when I did this project.  The postage stamp to really notice is the one featuring Clara Maass.  The stamp reads “She gave her life.” And she did in 1901 when she volunteered for medical experiments trying to find a cure for Yellow Fever.   

Wednesday, April 8, 2020

Stay Home, Make Art – Day 23



Making progress – the beginning pages will be a gradation of colors starting and dark blue then to lighter shades blue on the first four pages.  Today pages 5 and 6 transition from blue to aqua to green.  More green coming tomorrow.

Monday, April 6, 2020

Stay Home, Make Art – Day 21

Now the gluing starts.  Don’t let the buckling of the pages worry you.  I’ll use an iron and parchment paper to flatten out the dried pages.   For me, an iron is a tool for making art.  I’ve heard something about using it to remove wrinkles in one’s clothes, but I am not too sure if that is true.  

Saturday, April 4, 2020

Stay Home, Make Art, Check the Stamp Collection – Day 19


Like many artists who send mail art, I like using old, unused, postage stamps.  As long as they have never been used, they are still valid.  With the exception of the more recent Forever Stamps, this means covering envelopes with a collage of postage to reach the 55¢ needed for domestic mail or $1.20 for international.  
I never pay more than face value for the unused stamps, and many dealers will even sell them for less.  You can find them online and at places like the Vintage Paper Fair.  For some reason, I have still held on to my unused postage stamps.  The ones I used to collect going back to the time it was 8¢ to mail a letter.  As part of my sorting and organizing for some postage stamp-based art, I have now set these aside to use for postage.   Some are more than 40 years old, they have not appreciated in value but remain suitable for sending mail art.

Friday, April 3, 2020

Stay Home, Make Art – Day 18

Soaking old postage stamps in hot water to get the envelope paper to peel away easily.  I feel like a 12-year-old stamp collecting nerd again — but this time it’s for art

Thursday, April 2, 2020

Stay Home, Make Art – Day 17

I’ll be sorting all these old postage stamps for a while before I can start gluing.  I am sure I will have plenty of time.   

Wednesday, April 1, 2020

Stay Home, Sort, Sort, Sort and then Make Art – Day 16

I collected stamps when I was a kid and a few years back, I was using old postage stamps to make collages.  I still have thousands of them that I had no plans to ever use for collages.  Nowadays I make my own material for collage. I have decided to use the rest of my postage stamps in a stamp-themed artist scrapbook.  Before I can get gluing, I need to sort and sort (this will keep me busy for a few days). 
On another note, as we are all washing our hands, bags of old postage stamps are just filthy and if you need to be motivated to wash your hands really good, just dig in….

Sunday, August 2, 2015

August Mail, Round #1

There have been a lot of trips to the post office in the past two weeks because I have been shipping out my new book.  And each time there has been mail art waiting for me in the post office box.  Here are a few of the newest pieces:
  1. 19715 arrived from Adrienne Mason in Canada.
  2. A new card from Jennifer Utter.
  3. Some Pink Mail Art form Linda Roberts Sweeney in Sacramento.  Have you sent a piece yet?  Here is the call for artists.
  4. An enigmatic postcard with polaroid from the author St. John Karp.
  5. And a new print from Serse Luigetti in Italy.