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MAILED

Space Window

This experiment in Concretism is a bookwork generated for and by the Space Window mail art event in 1977.

Space Window was an event devoted to “man in space and space in art”. From September 14 through October 4, 1977, within various spaces of RISD and Brown University both artworks and space artifacts (including lunar soil!) were presented, along with a series of lectures, seminars, and other public events, featuring a variety of groups and individuals whose work deals with aspects of outer and/or inner space. 

That included a special mail art exhibition in the gallery space of Market House, featuring some ninety artists from twenty different countries, moved into action, and aided by our global postal system. Each submission of work was documented in a catalogue called Space Window. This catalogue also became a limited-edition bookwork honoring the mail art principles.

Space Window was originated and organized by Eve Vaterlaus and John Waltemath. In their own words “Space Window presented works of the scientist and artist alike, not to illustrate their differences, but to demonstrate that the search for greater knowledge is common to both, aiming to broaden the channels of communication between the two”. Recalling Dana Ashley‘s slogan “space is the connector of all things”, to organize a mail art exhibition at RISD seemed to be particularly appropriate to become part of the Space Window event. 

Mail art, while not necessarily characteristics as today’s world of art, had been an active and growing activity in past decade among the avant-garde. At least partially created out of the need and desire to circumvent the limitations of established outlets for exhibition and publishing, with whose traditions and conventions so many artists today are characteristically in conflict, it has become an exciting and vital alternative and as a communication system used by hundreds of artists around the world, with its results as valid as anything out there today.

And so, some ninety artists representing twenty different countries connected their spaces with ours in Providence, RI, moved to action by the ‘external network” and aided by our global postal system. Each person who submitted work to the mail art exhibition was accepted and exhibited, (i.e., no editing of artists or their work, since exclusion would be to violate the basic concept and principles of mail art). Which is not to say that there were so that there were no “irrelevant” works included, but any such editing was left up to the individual/viewer/reader/listener.

The mail art exhibition was on view in the gallery space of Market House (a historic building constructed in 1775, known as the “communication center” of Providence, now part of the RISD campus). It was on display for almost 5 weeks—in general since parts lingered on for longer as some works arrived late and were then honored to be exhibited. The material proved as a vibrant and provocative addition to the enormously successful Space Window event!