In 2020, artists making political statements have typically done so on the streets, with murals, protest placards or by knocking down old monuments.
But much overlooked is the envelope as a place for art. Since a stamp symbolizes the mail-in vote, it has come to represent a form of resistance, a form of direct action. The New York non-profit TRANS> has created a stamp project called These Times. The project, which will premiere both online and in sticker format, features 50 artists and institutions who stress the urgency of voting.
“The post office is at the helm of democracy,” says the New York-based curator, Sandra Antelo-Suarez. “It’s our civic duty to vote.
“It’s about creating grassroots structures that, along with museums, artists and art galleries, create an economy of response,” she adds.
It all started in March when the pandemic hit. Antelo-Suarez found herself frustrated. “I wanted to create a response, thinking about how culture and the art world could respond.” She began asking artists to participate in a grassroots project, one that would bring art to people’s homes. “I thought: stamps.
“I asked 50 artists in my personal network to make a gesture in an artwork that’s a tribute to our culture, which is being lost.”
Source: US Politics - theguardian.com