John Calvert PalmerMarch 16, 1927 - January 15, 2012Birthplace: Los Angeles, California Resided in: Bellingham Washington John C. "Jack" Palmer aka Rudi Rubberoid John C. "Jack" Palmer died January 15, 2012 under the loving care of his family, friends and the wonderful staff at Whatcom Hospice House. Jack was born March 16, 1927, to John P. and Ruth C. Palmer in Los Angeles. With his father in the Foreign Service, he spent his early years in Marseilles, France; Genoa, Italy; and Penang, Malaysia, before returning to the U.S., and he always had a special love for all things Italian and Asian, especially the food. He moved to Bellingham in 1960 and, after working in retail and restaurant management, opened his first business as a picture framer at P & W Frames, in 1970. Later, in the 1980s, he began the Postcard Palace on State Street, and after that went back to work part time as a picture framer at Art & Frames on Grand Ave. Jack was a man of many interests but he was first and foremost a gentleman and an artist with a wonderful sense of humor and the ability to always see the world through the eyes of both adult and child. His art has been shown in numerous local and national exhibits including the Seattle Art Museum (1958) and the Denver Art Museum's annual Exhibition of Western Art (1958, 1959 and 1961). In the 1980s he became active in the international mail art community as Rudi Rubberoid, corresponding with many people around the world and entering mail art exhibits throughout the u.S. and abroad. Numerous examples of his mail art and his specially decorated envelopes are posted at various sites on the Internet. Although he entertained himself and others with a variety of flamboyant alternative names, Rudi was by far his most iconic and well known mail art identity. Jack is survived by his wife of 44 years, Pauline; daughter and son-in-law Tilda and Rick Doughty of Edmonds; cousins Grant and Elaine Kinnear, Seattle, and Cal Kinnear and partner Jennifer, Vashon Island; extended family Steve Bieler and Deborah Wessell, Portland; and numerous mail art correspondents and friends. He also is the beloved Gump to all his granddaughters, great grandchildren and several generations of nieces and nephews. At his request, no public services will be held. Memorials may be made to Whatcom Hospice House, 2806 Douglas Ave., Bellingham WA 98225, USA. Arranged by Moles Family Funeral Homes & Crematory Link to an interview with RR by Ruud Janssen http://jas.faximum.com/library/tam/tam_56.htm |
FRIOUR project 13 is on rebellion, contestation, protest in all its meanings: artistic, political, social, cultural, historical and present ones. I dedicate this 2012 project to all mail artists who have told me they like my art but PLEASE Guido stay away from politics! They are forgetting that all the great art movements of the modern past (Dada, Surrealism, Cobra, Situationism) were involved in attempts to change society. So REBEL REBEL aka the essence of art expressions by artists in society
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dinsdag 14 februari 2012
IN MEMORIAM RUDI RUBBEROID (1927-2012), a rebel who put the FUN in disFUNctional
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