Asakiyume has alerted me to a great story about an anonymous library patron in Scotland who creates sculpture from old books and deposits them in libraries by stealth. The artist makes reference in his (her?) sculptures to Scottish mystery writer Ian Rankin and dragons and all sorts of literary things. You will flip over the pictures here.
Asakiyume says she likes the quotations that the mystery artist leaves with the sculptures: “I liked ‘Libraries are expensive,’ corrected to ‘Libraries are expansive,’ and also the quote from Robert Owen … (founder of some utopian communities) … ‘No infant has the power of deciding … by what circumstances (they) shall be surrounded.’ ”
The messages remind me of the mysterious tea cups of Anne Kraus, which I described here.
Now although Asakiyume knew I would love the book art, she may not have known that I have a family reputation for stealth projects, like secretly leaving a small Zimbabwean soapstone sculpture of parents and baby in John’s house after Meran gave birth.
Recently, I was telling Erik about a few of my escapades, and he got a look on his face suggesting that he was a little worried about the family he had married into.
When I was on the publicity committee for a local theater producing a musical about George Seurat, I purchased Seurat greeting cards and left them in stores’ card racks around town. They got sold, but the sales staff would have had to wing the price as there was no price on them.
Then there was the year that I sent a series of postcards from different cities under different names to an ice cream shop and in each card suggested a type of frozen dessert the shop should carry. Every card had a different reason why customers might want that dessert.
It worked, and the shop must have made money off the dessert as they stocked it for years afterward.
Photo: ThisCentralStation.com
Great post. (I did flip!) I shared on FB since many of those friends will appreciate. I also thought, like one of the commenters (sp?) on the original report, that Su Blackwell might be the artist. P.S. I love that you are getting your just “desserts”.
Hahaha. I must be afraid of interaction. Using stealth to ask for a dessert means the shop can ignore the request without any awkward embarrassment on either side, but if it is in their interest, then everyone is happy. P.S. I will look up Su Blackwell.
Your stealth postcard campaign for Tofutti ice-cream was genius!.. My facial expression probably just reflected that I was impressed by your persistence and ingenuity!.. 😉
Whew!