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Articles Written By Cynthia Gaub

Articles Written about Cynthia Gaub

  • Featured Artist Interview Originally published November 2005 at EBSQ
  • 11/2005 Creative Chaos Zine Feature Artist
  • ATC book: ‘Art in your pocket‘ by Andreas Duess, is a collaborative effort by over thirty ATC artists from around the globe. This beautifully printed 70 page book showcases over 150 cards in techniques ranging from photography to oil paintings and embroidery. The book is sized 138 mm x 216 mm (5 1/2 x 8 1/2 inches) and printed on 125g silk art paper with a heavy 250g laminated cover. A must-have for the serious ATC collector.
  • Collage art explores views of women The Enterprise Newspaper July 16, 2004
  • Third Thursday Art Walk offers summer fun The Enterprise Newspaper July 9, 2004
  • Artist’s work featured in city exhibit Kent Reporter April 2, 2003
  • Featured Artist Suite 101: Artistamps July 1, 2001
  • (Three) Graces Under Fire Seattle Magazine December 1997

About Artistamps

Stamp collecting is a hobby enjoyed by many throughout the world. But did you  know that creating stamps is also a well-loved hobby, and in fact an art form, practiced as long as stamps have been used as legal postage? Artistamps have been known through out the years as Seals, Decals, Poster Stamps, Cinderellas, Faux Postage, Postoids and have even been passed off as real postage.  But at the post office, they are only known as illegal forgeries. Wikipedia defines the  Artistamp as “postage stamp-like art form. It is similar to a Cinderella  stamp, in that it is not valid for postage, but it differs from a forgery … in that no intention is made to fool any post office or collector of stamps. The Artistamp is intended to be a miniature art form which  can depict or commemorate any subject its creator chooses.”

These art stamps have grown more and more common, first with the Dada  Movement in the 1920’s and 30’s and then with the popular explosion of Mail Art  in the 1980’s. In 1991, Nick Bantockbrought the world of Artistamps to the more popular reading public with his rich and wonderfully imaginative series, Griffin and Sabine.

Similar to the standard postage of the past, Artistamps will often be  perforated, gummed and display a country and monetary value. (these are the basic requirements.) They are often created uniquely or in limited editions. Artistamp creators will often include their work on actual mail, alongside valid postage stamps, in order to decorate the envelope with their art, similar to a Commemorative First Day Cover, which also a collectible.

Techniques for the creation of Artistamps vary greatly. They sometimes include perforations and a sticker or gummed backside to more resemble a traditional stamp, but that is by no means a requirement. Artistamps have been  issued in practically every possible format, often mimicking those of the postal services around the world, including  souvenir sheets, stickers and more. The artwork can be hand-drawn or painted,  lithographed or offset-printed, photographed, collaged, Xeroxed, rubber stamped, or printed with a computer printer. This is usually based on the skills, preferences and tools available to the artist.

Frequently the creators of such stamps will create an entire world, society  or political system in which to distribute their mock postage. Others will  comment on our own society or commemorate personal or public life and world events. Still others have made a business of creating for you a personalized stamp. Even now  stamp.com is offering the creation of legal US postage with your own images and  artwork.

So what of collecting these so called stamps? Do they have value? Philately  (stamp collecting) is not an artistic activity – mostly it is a kind of  investment: collecting monetary values. But Artistamps can not be used as legal tender in our current postal system. So they would have more of an artistic value, based on personal aesthetics combined with the popularity and value of the particular artist’s work.

If, then, you purchase Artistamps what should you do with them? Collecting them and saving them in archival stamp books or plastic protected binders is one  option. Using them to decorate your own mail is another. Even framing them and hanging them as a work of art is not uncommon. But whatever you do with them,  once you begin you will find it easy to become addicted to this wonderful form of mini-sized art.