The Wide - Awakes

On Saturday, October 3rd I participated in the nationwide Wide-Awakes event. “ The Wide Awakes are an open-source network who believe in the evolution of society and the power to radically reimagine the future through creative collaboration.” In Lawrence, our event was part of the ELNA/East 9th celebration. Visitors were encouraged to use the painting I made as a backdrop for photos that could be shared across the country.

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Celebrate People's History!

It was super exciting to receive the new edition of Celebrate People’s History in the mail today. Published by the Feminist Press, edited by Josh MacPhee with forewords by Charlene Carruthers and Rebecca Solnit, this remarkable expanded volume comes at the perfect moment. And, it includes five posters (pictured below) from the Kansas People’s History Project designed by Lana Grove, Emi Gennis, Cheyenne Garrison, Nedra Bonds and me Dave.

No Masks!

This COVID Cowboy’s advice, “No Masks!”

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We're not all in this together

We’re not all in this together. Many are dying or losing loved ones, while others go on seemingly unaffected or complaining about how recent events have interfered with their freedom to do whatever they want.

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Tribute to John Prine

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The beloved singer-songwriter John Prine died on April 7th from complications related to COVID-19. I knew and admired his music since I can remember. My folks played his records when I was a kid and I went to see him whenever I could. The last time was in Salina, KS in 2017. He was great. Like many I suppose, his words echo through my life in good times and bad. I’ve been inspired to create posters based on his songs, and have fallen in love to his offbeat rhymes. This tribute is based on a 1970’s photo of John in front of a bunch of orphaned Bob’s Big Boy figurines. I adapted it to hint at Roger Ebert’s nickname for Prine, the “Singing Mailman,” and added an old bottle of Orange Crush to reference the line, “I’m sitting on the front steps drinking Orange Crush, wondering if it’s possible if I could still blush,” from his song, “The Sins of Memphisto.”

If you want to see it, come over to East Lawrence and find the Turnhalle. It’s on the alley-side facing east.

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We March!

Langston Hughes sitting against St. Luke AME church in Lawrence, KS   (detail of 2006 mural in Hobbs Park)

Langston Hughes sitting against St. Luke AME church in Lawrence, KS (detail of 2006 mural in Hobbs Park)

Youth by Langston Hughes

We have tomorrow Bright before us Like a flame.

Yesterday a night-gone thing. A sun-down name.

And dawn-today Broad arch above the road we came.

We March!

Capitalism is the crisis

Two unlikely friends have set up a mutual aid network for all the creatures living along the Burroughs Creek Trail.

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Anywhere (is better than here)

Signs to a way forward in this disorienting moment point in many directions, but none will lead me back in time to the way things used to be.

You can get a free download of this at Justseeds and/or get a signed copy in my website shop.

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We Are

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Feel free to print, post and share. -Dave

Feel free to print, post and share. -Dave

At the end of the day

A new site-specific installation in the Spiva Art Gallery at Missouri Southern University in Joplin, Missouri. I will be giving an artist talk on February 11 and the show continues until February 18.

We Are The Wetlands - Poster Project

These posters were just completed by students in the Environmental Issues of the Wakarusa Wetlands class that I have been co-teaching at Haskell Indian Nations University with Jay T. Johnson, Joseph P. Brewer and Cody Marshall. Inspired by the decades long struggle to protect the Wakarusa Wetlands from the now built K-10 trafficway, students from both Haskell and KU worked in pairs to imagine how to re-engage the Lawrence community with the continued challenges facing this ecosystem and the cultural life which it embodies.

The posters will be on view at the Spencer Museum of Art in November and are available as free downloads here.