Mail Art Labels

Mail Art Labels, originally uploaded by Leah Virsik.

So yesterday after covering up the mailing area on my postcard I designed, I decided I needed to make labels. A fun project. I hadn’t thought of making fun labels just because before now.  I didn’t draw the pig but I think he’s really cute. I’m finding it very helpful to push myself with Art Everyday Month.

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2 Comments

  1. Posted 5 November 2009 at 2:10 am | Permalink

    Beautiful labels! The pig is super cute indeed…I like his big teethy smile :P

  2. Posted 5 November 2009 at 12:26 pm | Permalink

    This project is firing me up in unbelievable ways. Considering I barely slept last night, this is rather remarkable.

    Your labels are darling. Each different one has such personality!

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  • Artist statement

    I’m hungry to learn and it’s through my process of creating that I’m ultimately satisfied. I’m curious about different materials and take on the challenge to incorporate what I’m most drawn to into my work. I’m intrigued to discover the resulting patterns and repetition. As I create, I explore my inner landscape. I’m attempting to uncover a stifled sound. It’s my challenge to express this internal voice through my art and ultimately, boldly, out loud.

    My quest to connect my voice with my work has led me to reexamine my personal history. The threads in my bookbinding and in my collage are entwined in my familial roots. Growing up, I remember a quilt frame my dad made, taking up our entire living room. His grandmother taught him to quilt using scraps of clothing. Years later, I began a quilt when a friend was teaching a class on patchwork. To my surprise, cutting up fabric and piecing it back together reminded me of my work with paper collage.

    As a child I would sew with my mom and what I most remember is the guilt I’d feel as I jammed up her machine. Now, when the threads and material bunch up they become useful fodder for my work. In some ways the threads act as a binding element, as in my books, and in other ways they are a reflection of my internal processes.