A postcard collection is never stable, never entirely complete.
Ten years ago, artist MaryAnne Francis played with the challenge of ordering her collection of postcards in her work 'Unsorted'.
Rather than showing an ordered collection, she exhibited her postcards in the process of being classified. According to MaryAnne, the installation showed someone “attempting to arrange – sort out – a collection of sorts… but: how to sort a type or type a sort?”
I’ve come to realise that just as a collection reaches some kind of order, it seems to call out for more of a type and then, inevitably, more of a sort. -----
Image of artwork in video courtesy of the artist: installation view of 'Unsorted' at e1 gallery, London, 2002 Artwork sourced from Jeremy Cooper's 'Artists' Postcards', Reaktion Books.
It's a video blog this week. Too much going on to type!
In the video I mention a new project 'In Between Postcards'where I'm sending a postcard a day from my mobile phone, and asking if this is the future of the postcard.
Finally, a pic of June's History Today. My article on Edwardian postcard culture will be inside. Really looking forward to seeing what people make of it.
The card on the front is of actor Lewis Waller. The HT editors chose it because it's such a good example of the 'undivided back': the message is scribbled in the margin around the picture of Waller, as the other side had to be kept free for the address. Although, I'm guessing the fact he's carrying an iPad also came into the reckoning.
At the end of the exhibition, cards will be sold off for £45 each. Post purchase buyers find out who made their cards.
Photo of the RCA Secret from 2011
Of late, I've been reading Jeremy Cooper's Artists' Postcards, an excellent compendium of how the postcard has been used by different artists since 1900. It's quite a book. And I bet more than a few RCA artists refer to it as they create their cards for 2013.
At a pace, Cooper takes you through the canon(?) of postcard art: René Magritte's postcard magazines, Gilbert & George's Post Card Sculptures, Paul Morton's Thatcher Therapy (a dot-to-dot postcard suggesting you draw a pencil mesh over a photo of the ex-PM), Joseph Beuys' wooden postcards, Rachel Whiteread's hole-punched cards...
Two cards stood out, though. It's always the personal connections ultimately, isn't it?
The first, a 1908 Donald McGill postcard titled "In the Asylum". The image shows a red-nosed man, grinning from behind the bars of a cell door.
Above him is a sign:
CAUSE: Picture-postcard collecting
CONDITION: Up the pole
REMARKS: Thinks he's a Gibson Girl
How cruel Donald!? How cruel.
The second card was made by Belgian artist Francis Alÿs. I first came across Alÿs when a friend showed me this film of him painting a line in the middle of a road in Panama. I love it.
The card caught my eye, not just because it was made by Alÿs but because of the contrast with a Rough Sea postcard I bought recently.
The Rough Sea series was one of the most popular in Edwardian Britain. Published by Tuck's, some say it tapped into Britain's island psyche, others that the cards have a deep erotic charge.
While I really like Rough Sea cards, I resist collecting them. One thing I have learnt is that to avoid ending up in McGill's collecting asylum you have to set some limits.
Rather than buying it for the image, I bought it to add to my collection of old postcard messages. Specifically, I bought it to add to a new category of cards I've noticed: empty postcards, postcards without written messages.
Increasingly, I'm coming to think of them as secret postcards.
RCA Secret opens on Thursday 14 March at the Dyson Building in Battersea, London. The sale takes place on Saturday 23 March. If you're going, good luck!
Paul Ricoeur noted that when we meet an author "we experience a profound disruption of the peculiar relation that we have with [them] through [their] work.” (Ricoeur 1991, p. 107)
Meeting an author (or an artist) removes the distance we normally have from them when we consider their books (art). A dialogue is possible where it wasn't before.
In the case of a book signing, however, it is likely to be an unbalanced dialogue which emerges. Loaded with the scripted thoughts of the reader/consumer and hurried by the queue behind, some of the distance remains.
I went to see the Gilbert and George postcard art exhibition at the White Cube a few months ago, and thought it would be interesting to see them in person at their book signing at the Tate last week - not least as they too collect old postcards. I went, after a day in the library.
Ricoeur, P., 1991. From Text to Action: Essays in Hermeneutics II. Evanston, Illinois: Northwestern University Press.