Brian Andreas

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Brian Andreas (2004)
Brian Andreas (2004)

Brian Andreas (born 1956 in Iowa City, Iowa) is an American writer, painter, sculptor and publisher. Most notable of his works are the StoryPeople objects he makes using salvaged wood from old homesteads.[1] These mixed-media works include a short story that focuses on a moment or a memory,[2] and the deliberately crude shapes display bright yet soothing colors and shadowy amorphous faces to go along with the simple, declarative language of the prose.[3] This style eventually led to a wide-ranging array of works, from the publication of nine books, to the production of brightly painted furniture hand-stamped with short stories. The diversity of his interests led to the 1994 foundation of his StoryPeople company.

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[edit] Background

Andreas was born in 1956 in Iowa City, Iowa, and grew up in Chicago, Illinois. He graduated from Luther College in Decorah, Iowa, in 1979 and went on to receive his MFA in Fiber and Mixed Media in 1992 from the John F. Kennedy University in Orinda, California,[4] where he studied with an emphasis on electronic community (focusing on stories as human community.)[5] It was during 1992-1993, in conjunction with the Graduate School of Arts and Consciousness at JFK University, that he coordinated an early Internet experiment called the Hall of Whispers.

[edit] Hall of Whispers

Andreas set out to ask people to share stories about their experience of being alive, using the Internet of the early 1990's.[6] Of this experiment, he wrote:

"Hall of Whispers takes its name from an ancient Babylonian myth of a specially constructed room in one of the ziggurats (stepped pyramids) where a whisper would stay alive forever. I have an image of the electronic networks whispering ceaselessly with the voices of our times.

"The form of the project is deceptively simple . . . to create a situation . . . where we could join each other around a technological campfire . . . to create a virtual community using an ancient fundamental of community-making: shared stories . . . a council model for understanding our world . . . that it is in the sharing that greater wisdom evolves. Finally, in a turbulent world, it is easy to lose sight of the small beauties and moments of grace that occur constantly around us. I wanted Hall of Whispers to give voice to that side of ourselves that recognizes that this is as much a time of renewal as it is a time of decay."[7]

Using the then-infantile Internet in accompaniment with fax, phone and standard mail,[8] Andreas ultimately gathered more than 4,000 stories from around the world.[9] At the time, Andreas was living with his wife and two young sons in Berkeley, and had artistically set out down the monochromatic path of stone sculpting. "I had lots of white, black and beige around but no color."[10] Finally, his wife is reported to have told him, "Please don't talk to me again until you have some color."[11]

[edit] StoryPeople

Ten Commandments (1997)
Ten Commandments (1997)

With his wife's words and two young sons as motivation, Andreas went out into his backyard and pulled a board from the fence and began to play with the boards and place little stories and some color onto them. Soon, shaped as 'people,' they began to sell.[12] Encouraged by the results, Andreas and his wife, Ellen Rockne, along with their sons, subsequently left Berkeley early in 1994 and returned to Decorah, Iowa, where the two had previously attended Luther College.[13] Of the results of the Hall of Whispers and the fence-board experiments, it was eventually written that "he discovered the StoryPeople waiting to be carved out of rough barn board, painted in bright colors, and hand-lettered with their individual stories."[14] He "gives voice to the vision of the child and the unsophisticated in books that listen to unnamed 'StoryPeople,' who express themselves through hand-stamped print, as if epigrammatically."[15]

Andreas established the StoryPeople headquarters in downtown Decorah, Iowa, in May of 1994 and spent the next decade directing the production of wood sculptures, print reproductions, books, greeting card sets and furniture all bearing his trademark "bright colors . . . and hand-lettered stories." He and his family have since moved back to California[16] where they have recently moved into their new eco-friendly "green" home. Andreas continues to innovate with new stories and new media, currently creating original works on large canvases while also overseeing the development of a new website.

Of his work, Andreas says, "I like art that admits to being a part of life. The moments I have with my friends and family are really all that I need. I like to take them and weave them into stories that are filled with laughter and music and lunacy. And they are mostly true, but I'm not telling which parts. . . "[17] "I have a real quirky view of the world. A century ago I would have been standing on a soapbox in Hyde Park telling people about a better way of seeing."[18]

Andreas' first book of hand-stamped stories and black-and-white line drawings, entitled Mostly True, was first published in August, 1993. Still Mostly True followed in May of 1994, and to date Andreas' publications include a total of nine books.[19]

[edit] Bibliography

  • Mostly True (1993)
  • Still Mostly True (1994)
  • Going Somewhere Soon (1995)
  • Strange Dreams (1996)
  • Story People (1997)
  • Hearing Voices (1998)
  • Trusting Soul (2000)
  • Traveling Light (2003)
  • Some Kind of Ride (2006)

[edit] References

  1. ^ Young 1996, p. C3.
  2. ^ Webb 2006, p. 2D.
  3. ^ Watts 1995, Sketchbook.
  4. ^ Langton 1998, cover.
  5. ^ Brainard 1994, B8.
  6. ^ Wiley 1995, p. 2A.
  7. ^ Andreas 1993, pp. 256-257.
  8. ^ Andreas 1993, pp. 256-257.
  9. ^ Brainard 1994, p. B8.
  10. ^ Nathan 1998, p. 25.
  11. ^ Langton 1998, cover.
  12. ^ Nathan 1998, p. 25.
  13. ^ Langton 1998, cover.
  14. ^ Wiley 1995, p. 1A.
  15. ^ Marty 1998, p. 14.
  16. ^ Webb 2006, 2D.
  17. ^ Brainard 1994, B8.
  18. ^ Young 1996, C3.
  19. ^ Brainard 1994, p. B8.

[edit] Further reading

  • Andreas, B (1993). "Hall of Whispers: A Virtual Opera," LEONARDO, Vol. 26, No. 3, pp. 256-257.
  • Brainard, L (June 16, 1994). "Arts and stories lead to StoryPeople," Decorah Journal, p. B8.
  • Langton, C (Fall, 1998). "Stories, Sketches, Trunks, and the Art of Life," Vesterheim News, cover.
  • Marty, M (July, 1998). "Revising the Map of American Religion," Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 558, Americans and Religions in the Twenty-First Century, pp. 14, 15.
  • Nathan, J (Sept., 1998). "The StoryPeople: A Publishing Tale," ForeWord, p. 25.
  • Watts Jr., J (May 21, 1995). "Artist's Work Like Prism Held Up to Light of Life," Tulsa World, Sketchbook.
  • Webb, J (Dec. 8, 2006). "Slices of life, served with color," Billings Gazette, pp. 2D-3D.
  • Wiley, D (Feb. 27, 1995). "His art speaks to people," Des Moines Register, pp. 1A-2A.
  • Young, L (Nov. 7, 1996). "Funny People Hanging Around At the Library," New York Times, p. C3.

[edit] External links