Postcards
In 1869 someone sent the first postcard, in Austria. Though it was initially considered improper and insecure, the postcard quickly grew in popularity, and was embraced as an inexpensive, casual way to stay connected to others in an increasingly fast-moving world. Trains and steamships fueled both the movement of and market for postcards. In 1893 the World Columbian Exposition, which hosted over 25 million people in Chicago, Illinois, presented the first souvenir postcards. By the early 1900s, new technology, like the No. 3 Folding Pocket Kodak Camera, made printing photographs directly onto greeting cards possible, making photographic postcards an accessible way to stay connected to those far away.
Featured Works
8
Girl at Window (Mädchen am Fenster) (postcard)
Oskar Kokoschka
1907
Giant Postcard: Sunset from London Knees 1966
Claes Oldenburg
1966, published 1968
100 Boots
Eleanor Antin
1971-73
Postcard with notes for Mieko Shiomi's Spatial Poem No. 3
George Maciunas
1972
Postcard for Life Is Sweet in Sweden , Trixter Theater, G...
Aleksandra Mir
1995
Postcard to the artist's sister at the Goethe Institute M...
Hannah Höch
1964
Untitled (The dance of to day)
George Grosz
c. 1922
Untitled
Unidentified photographer
April 1914