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Retrospections on Two blocks south of my house on The address on
Mail-artists in 2006 might well pause for a moment
at 464 West 23rd Street to reflect on the history and geography of
mail-art, acknowledging the mail-art which Giocoma Balla addressed to
Manhattan. Mail-art around 1930 was
nothing new. Mail in some sense had
always been mail-art, expressing visual meanings in addition to explicit verbal
messages. In the 19th
century, the first printed stamps were designed with an expressive aesthetic
quality, and the deployment of a stamp on a card or envelope could be part of a
satisfying design. Myriad artists
drew on envelopes and cards, as when Picasso sketched and resketched to prepare
one postcard as a mute message for one woman. By 1929-1931, when Depero lived in
During the Civil War, envelopes became
vehicles carrying political slogans.
At the same time, in No one fathered mail-art, and no one founded mail-art, the history of which will be as mail-art becomes. Early aestheticized mail could not be classified as “mail-art” until it came under the shadow that was cast back upon it by a network of mail-art. Now, the mail-art of next week will be in a position to construct its origins, retrospectively. Certainly Ray Johnson was never the father or founder of mail-art. However, by asking a recipient to mail a paper object to someone else, he did start a network, which soon became a self-constructing informal system which, as it enlarged and continued to develop, widened its future and deepened its past. Earlier envelopes and cards became its foundation later. Now that other structures have been built on Ray’s network, it belongs to the history of networks, not to the history of all mail-art. The network took enormous energy to set in
motion. Sometime, perhaps by 1961,
Ray began to write “Please send to …” on pieces of paper he mailed as cards or
as the contents of envelopes. The
earliest I understood, remembered, and consciously acknowledged was mail sent by
Ray Johnson to May The relay of cards and envelopes was the beginning
of a network set in motion by Ray Johnson.
The network was soon named the New York Correspondence School of Art by
Ed Plunkett, reflecting both the New York School of Abstract-Expressionist
painters, and the fact that May Wilson had studied both the studio practice of
art and the history of art by correspondence courses. She was a suburban housewife and
grandmother who answered advertisements in order to learn to paint by mail. Without her cooperation, Ray could not
have interwoven his network of correspondences. That she lived until 1966 on
“ Ray Johnson encouraged such lateral moves in art as a gift from a person to a person, rather than art as individual transcendence, consistent with aspirations toward fame and money. In his experience, as I witnessed it, the beautiful was that which made him desire to conceive something with it. He mailed suggestive images on paper to other people, hoping that they would accept an invitation to construct something never seen before, and would conceive something that could be given to someone else. Now in 2006, any mail-art that builds its structure on Ray’s network secures his network in its foundation, where it hums away like the conscience of mail-art. Ray understood that his network was a process, never a product that he possessed because he had fathered it. Let it be said, that if Ray Johnson fathered anything, he fathered nothing. Bill Wilson June 15, 2006 458 West 25th
Street
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