Secrets of Art History Postcard Swap

As wonderful as it is to get e-mail from anywhere in the world in seconds, there are some of us who still treasure an actual piece of paper that someone else has made marks on. These pages show postcards that a dozen members of the Carving Consortium mailing list made to swap with each other. All these cards feature at least one image from a stamp carved by the artist from an eraser or eraser-like printmaking material. Each participant made six cards and will get six cards back.


Here's the original call for the project:

SWAP: Proposal: Secrets of Art History

SWAP NAME: Secrets of Art History, 6 for 6 postcard swap

ITEMS: send six postcards, up to 6 x 4-1/4 inches, get six postcards back

DETAILS: What piece of art hasn't made it into the big history books but deserves to be better known? It could be something at a museum that speaks to you (maybe from an underrepresented culture or tradition or medium), an architectural detail from a building in your neighborhood, a vase in a Chinese restaurant, some local folk art, or whatever you feel is worth a long look.

Sketch it (if you can find a picture of it, it's not secret enough! but I won't check up on you) carve a stamp of it, and show us. Include a few words of description -- handwritten or computer-printed is fine -- and where it comes from and when it was made, but you don't have to say where it is now.


Well, judge for yourself how it worked. I'm really pleased at the response. One participant wrote,

I got my secrets on postcards yesterday and I've been speechless with amazement at the variety of art in our environment. Thanks, everyone--for the buildings, the building parts, the bicycle mailboxes, the tattoo designs, and the primitive art that you carved to show us the art I guess I haven't noticed before.
The images below are shown at 25% size. Click on any one to see it at full size and resolution and to read the artist's statement (if any) and a description of technical details not evident in the picture.
Pennsylvania bicycle mailbox
bicycle mailbox
Melody Whittemore
archaeological art from Cyprus
ancient art from Cyprus
Susan Houghton
animal from Mali
animal from Mali
Jarrettia Adams
Maori tattoos
Maori tattoo designs
Stephanie Hall
pre-psychedelic Matisse
lost Matisse linocut
Kinga Britschgi
monkey dreams of big coconut
Monkey dream
Nadine Fenton
ceiling of Orpheum Theatre
ceiling design
Connie Gunderson
Occidental College student center

Occidental College
Jane Arnal

Bangladeshi wooden peacock
woodwork peacock
Maimun Khan
two portrait sculptures
two portraits
Annette Cramer
thongs on an Australian beach
Australian thongs
Sue Raison
building top piece
building toppiece
Jan Bryant
Yoruba batik designs
Yoruba batik designs
Kimberly Byerly

The Carving Consortium's International Treasury of Eraser Carved Images

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E-mail deanb@world.std.com