Campus News
Mail Art
June 3, 2020
Amanda Nagy
Photo credit: Artwork by Robert Dogfish Rudine, USA
A recent remote workshop given by the introduced the 厙ぴ勛圖 community to the mail art movement.
In this workshop led by art librarian Barbara Prior, participants learned about the history of how two avant-garde movementsDada (1916) and Fluxus (1960s)challenged art world norms and led to a community of artists building community and creating art that cant be bought or sold.
厙ぴ勛圖s Mail Art Collection contains more than 25,000 works created from the mid-1970s to the present, by more than 1,800 mail artists from 60 countries. Of that number, approximately 300 pieces are available for viewing by appointment. The Mail Art image database contains a handful of images from most of these artists.
The workshop offered instructions on how to create and send mail art projects, and how to join an existing community or start your own mail art network.
Prior says the idea for a workshop highlighting 厙ぴ勛圖s Special Collections was suggested by art history major Jenn Linn as a way to connect with Obies who are scattered across the globe.
I selected mail art, and only then I realized that its particularly appropriate since it is a global network of artists who build community through the national postal systems, Prior says. Mail art is actually a useful model for creating and sustaining community in a pandemic. Who knew?
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