Category — Campaign Crafts
Large Outdoor Mosaic
We love mosaics, and this one is really special.The glass tiles are tiny. Really tiny. And they make up amazing detail in this portrait. Here’s a description from the artist’s, Mike Mandel, flickr photo page: The artwork is comprised of 4,320 porcelain and glass mosaic tiles, and is 7’ 6” high and 4’ wide. It is designed to be a public artwork, and is installed on the front porch at the artist’s family home at the corner of Maplewood Street and Langdon Avenue in Watertown [Massachusetts]. It will be on display at least until the election, and hopefully until Barack Obama’s inauguration in January.
From the artist a sentiment that many of probably identify with,
“Obama calls for a renewal for America that should come from ‘the bottom up’. As an individual I can give money to the campaign, as I have, but I can also do what I do best, and that is to create an artwork that I hope will inspire and energize the viewing public. I hope this work will enable others to employ their own creativity to express their support for a better future for this country, and the most important thing we can do in that quest is to make Barack Obama president of the United States.”
Check out the details of this piece over at this flickr photo set.
Yes We Can!
October 30, 2008 Comments Off
Navajo Nation Rally Sign in ABQ
Scoutj has taken some of the most beautiful photos of election-related events we’ve seen, all in New Mexico—and we’re so thrilled that she snapped this one from an Obama rally in Albuquerque. We love this sign celebrating both the Navajo Nation and the Obama campaign. If you’ve been following this election closely, you may have heard that Barack Obama has had really unprecented support about Native Americans. During the primaries, he was even adopted by the Crow Nation in Montana, and given the name, “One Who Helps People Throughout the Land.” He was the first presidential candidate to ever travel through the Crow Nation. You can read more about First Americans for Obama right here.
Note: I can recognize one of the signatures on the sign as NM Governor Bill Richardson (we lived in Santa Fe for much of Bill’s administration, so it’s pretty recognizable at this point). If you recognize any of the others, let us know!
Yes We Can!
October 30, 2008 Comments Off
“Change Time” Drawing from Comic Nurse
And back to our regularly scheduled programming…
In the flurry around the screen printing party, we neglected to post this colored pencil on watercolor paper drawing by Chicagoan ComicNurse (you can check out more of her work here). When you reflect on the meaning of this quote from Obama’s Super Tuesday speech, it couldn’t be more timely. (Andrew Sullivan’s analysis of this oft-derided statement is outstanding, if you’re interested.) “We are the ones we have been waiting for.” is a Hopi saying that has been repeated–in various forms–by a number of people, including as a 2006 title of a book by Alice Walker. It also reminds us of this famous quotation from Gandhi,
You must be the change you wish to see in the world.
Either way you look at it, it’s a perfect sentiment to remember as Election Day draws near.
Yes We Can!
October 28, 2008 Comments Off
We’re In It Together
This video epitomizes the spirit of what we’re trying to articulate with the Obama Craft Project site. (And it’s definitely the only “Crafty” YouTube video that that Obama Campaign has uploaded.) By posting your projects to this site, we try to celebrate Barack Obama’s positive message, and crafters’ response to that message. We love that a virtual community of makers of all types that have come together to support the Campaign for Change, and have articulated–via knitting, sewing, printmaking, collage and many other mediums–the belief and commitment to transforming this nation.
We’ve had some “issues” the last few days or so with the site and our Flickr pool with folks who feel the need to tear us, and other Obama supporters, down for whatever reason. We’ve received some vicious comments on this site, angry photos hae been uploaded to our Flickr pool and mean comments have been left on our–and others’–Obama-related images. There’s even the possibility, according to our web host, that there may have been some nefarious attempts to get gain access the admin area of the Obama Craft Project site. That means that there’s been significant periods of time when we’ve been unable to access the site ourselves, which means less posting of your wonderful work.
We’d be lying if we said it didn’t upset us just a bit. We’d like to think that even if we disagree, that we’re all Americans and that we can work together to solve the tough challenges ahead. It’s disappointing to realize that not everyone feels that way. It’s frustrating to realize that the mere existence of this site makes people so angry–”appalled” as one individual wrote.
But, we don’t dwell on the negativity, we know it’s often a part of these long, emotional campaigns that are the reality of modern American politics. Instead, we remember these words from our candidate on what seemed to be a disappointing night after Barack’s close loss in the New Hampshire primaries,
We have been told we cannot do this by a chorus of cynics who will only grow louder and more dissonant in the weeks to come. We’ve been asked to pause for a reality check. We’ve been warned against offering the people of this nation false hope. But in the unlikely story that is America, there has never been anything false about hope. For when we have faced down impossible odds; when we’ve been told that we’re not ready, or that we shouldn’t try, or that we can’t, generations of Americans have responded with a simple creed that sums up the spirit of a people.
Yes we can.
Election Day is in one week.
October 28, 2008 3 Comments
Handmade Sign Roundup
This morning, we thought we’d highlight some of the fantastic signs that folks all over the country have made to promote Barack Obama…
Lisa, from Madison, Wisconsin, spotted these very informative signs in her hometown. There are more images in this photoset on flickr.
October 27, 2008 9 Comments





