Welcome back!
While digging through files in my rapidly dying computer, I was delighted to come across a cache of images of some of my old mail art!
From the dates I can make out, they appear to all be from 1987 to 1991. They were all sent to my aunt. (Her married last name was "Kokesh".)Seeing them all again, I more or less remember them. I do remember I had an assignment in college once where we had to show/present something unusual about us that we do. In a panic, I asked my aunt if she had saved any envelopes. She sent me these.
The thing is, she was "just my aunt." (But oh, how I sooooo wish she were still here.) I never sent her my "best" stuff. That was reserved for my friends.
I continued to make mail art well beyond 1991. I did it, at least, into the early 2000s.But who knows where any of it (if any still exists) is today?
It is eveident that, even back then, I was often going outside the confines of the envelopes borders. That's a practice I continued to do when I returned to the hobby...but have more or less stopped doing because my mailings have a habit of NOT showing up where I am sending them if there are pop-offs.
Some of them had nice surprises, like the moai (Easter Island-like tiki, as I am a big tiki bar geek) or the appearance of my monster girl character. (I used to draw her all of the time!)
Most--but clearly not all--were designed to emulate movie posters for made up movies, which is mostly what I still do today.
It is weird seeing envelopes that were doodles/drawings. I remember them--I did them--but I just don't/can't doodle/draw any more. (Not that I was any good at it back then...)
I also used to color everything back then. That whole weird background is a doodle. If you'll notice in this picture, almost everything else (the figures, most of the verbiage boxes, etc.) have been colored with markers...something I do NOT do nowadays.
I loved the stamps back then, too. Stamps now are...just not as fun. And look at that price? Yowza! Only 25 cents to mail something back then. What does a stamp cost now? Something like 60 cents or so? Jeepers!
This one from 1987 has a (boring) stamp that was only 22 cents! Jinkies! HOW did postage get so expensive?
Back in the day during that class presentation, someone asked I sent all of my mail out decorated. No way. Mail art takes quite a while to do. It may not look like much, but I spent (wasted?) HOURS doing these. I certainly didn't waste my time making mail art out for credit card and utility bill payments. If I liked you, you got mail art (at least once).
Aside from family and friends, most of my output went to those in the mail art community that I was in contact with. Where are they all now? Most I do not even remember their names (real or mail art aliases) any more.
Some, like this AWFUL drawing, are just plain embarrassing. (Remember, I did not send my "best" stuff to my aunt... She got a lot of mail from me--but most of it was the stuff I was less proud of.)
Yowza--I have no idea where the stamp was on this one, but it made it through the mail withOUT one. There is something the post office stamped on it, "Evidence of postage having been applied", but I have no idea where it could have been looking at this now.
Sometimes you just run out of ideas...like this one. It's a triple feature of three bad ideas on one envelope. None of the faux movies ads work. That still holds true today. Some of my newer stuff is uninspired and bland. Oh well, it happens.
This is the last of the old envelopes in the file. It was a fun little flashback-o-rama and I'm glad I found these. Hopefully seeing these old chestnuts will inspire me anew. (Or not...)
Now on to the new stuff...
While I was in California, I promised IUOMA (International Union of Mail Artists) member, Marcia Rosenberger in Brazil, that I would send her something when I got back home. When I returned to Washington though, I was so overwhelmed with mail art that I "owed" others, I had to postpone making something for her until I could get caught up. Not wanting to break my promise, the very first new thing I made this go-round is for her. However... My computer was dying--and I got a new one. Then my printer was held hostage by HP (insisting I subscribe to their expensive ink cartridge program--or making my printer unusable. Anyone else experience this?). So, while a new printer is in the back of my mind, for now I needed to rely on the library for my printing needs. I made a bunch of Word documents with addresses, photos, titles, tag lines, etc. However, at the library, I failed to realize that fonts I have at home are NOT necessarily on the library's computers/printers. Also, the envelope I envisioned for Marcia, I somehow forgot to print the file for. So she got one of the others I had thought up instead (in order to maximize my library time), For better or worse, this is what she got. And--as lame as it is, the international postage stamps really makes it that much worse. Ugh! Sorry, Marcia.
Of course, CANNIBAL CLOWNS (and all of the images I found for possible use on the envelope) inspired a full-blown CANNIBAL CIRCUS. The lettering for CIRCUS was a photo I'd printed (Thank goodness). CANNIBAL was just some red paprer I drew letters on (since the library's font for it was boring). Again, the stamp is painful...Skip up to the next post here:
https://monsterago-go.blogspot.com/2023/03/mail-art-20-mail-call.html
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Comments
It's fun to see someone's work change over time. A couple of weeks ago I had lunch with a friend I haven't seen in over a year, and he asked me about my art. I showed him a few pieces on my phone, and he said my art has changed a lot. I hadn't noticed that myself.
Oh yes, right away I noticed the price of postage. OMG!
Yay! I have an envelope on the way. I know I've said this before, but I love your envelopes!