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Excerpt:
...No matter how far or fast we dive into the information
age, we will always have regular mail. Though we may
all be carrying around PDA’s, cell phones or whatever
new combination communication gadget has been recently
invented, we still greatly rely upon the mail or as
it affectionately has become known, ‘snail mail’. Even
with our mailboxes overflowing with junk mail, bills
and tax forms, there is still the occasion that we get
something that makes us feel good when we go through
the pile. A birthday card, a magazine, or pictures from
a family event, these hard, tangible documents are coveted.
Though most of us get our mail slipped through a slot
in the front door of our homes, actual mailboxes still
exist, out there, in the rural countryside, along country
roads and the byways of America.
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Are these creations a utilitarian object or some form
of folk art? They are certainly indigenous to a particular
region, that being the rural countryside. And they present
some type of decorative skills by their makers. Somehow
they offer a reminder of colonial times in that they
combine a sense of charm and practical craftsmanship.
Intrinsically what I see in them is a naive sense of
design and an outgoing desire to create an object that
expresses individualism and creativity.
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