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Ephemera washes away in flood

WASSAIC, N.Y. — Anyone who has passed the prime of optimistic youth understands the meaning of the words “ghost of a dream.” For artists Lauren Was and Adam Eckstrom, those words are more than an expression of disappointment. Together, as sculptors, they use the ephemera of dreams and ambition such as lottery tickets, wedding invitations, romance novel covers to create works of art that are visually compelling but also have a strong undercurrent of emotion. When they work together, they call themselves Ghost of a Dream.“We make all of our work about people’s hopes and dreams and make it out of the ephemera that people have used to either escape into their dreams or attain their dreams,” Was explained in a phone interview last week.Although they are fairly young (recently married and recently the owners of a home in Wassaic) they have certainly experienced the disappointment that comes with a major impediment to one’s plans, fantasies, dreams or hopes. The most recent one came in the wake of Superstorm Sandy, when the ephemera they had been collecting for years — and which they use to create their artwork — was destroyed in a flood at an art studio called Smack Mellon where they were working, in the Brooklyn neighborhood known as Dumbo. Dumbo stands for Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass and so it doesn’t take a huge leap of logic to understand how the space was flooded. Was and Eckstrom, who have done residencies at several artist programs (including the Wassaic Project), had been selected to take part in the Smack Mellon Artist Studio Program. Eckstrom and Was moved down to Dumbo in April, and had five months left in their residency. Fortunately, of course, and unlike many New York area residents, they have someplace else to go to work and live. But now they are trying to gather together new materials for their work.Ephemera is the name given to bits of paper that have only a temporary or momentary significance. It’s a broad area that includes holiday cards, birthday cards, posters, theater tickets or performance programs, baseball cards, labels, Valentines, seed packets. Many people collect it, usually with a focus on one or more categories. There is even an Ephemera Society of America.Was and Eckstrom are hoping that people will share with them their meaningful little bits of saved paper — although of course they are looking for specific items, not the contents of an overloaded closet. They are looking specifically for lottery tickets (the brightly colored ones that are sold from reels, not the paper ones that are printed out for drawings such as Powerball). They would like wedding invitations, covers of romance novels and self-help books, trophies, religious pamphlets, baseball cards (from any era), remnants of carpet that have come from casinos, birthday cards.Was said that the couple’s interest in odd scraps from other people’s lives grew out of long walks they used to take (with their dog) in Brooklyn after their first got married a few years ago. “We started finding these lottery tickets on the ground and we started picking them up and thinking how beautiful they are,” Was said. “They’re made to be bling-y and attractive and to light that carnal excitement center in our brains. And then we started thinking of each ticket as a lost dream. Someone was trying to find a better way of life, and when they didn’t win, they would just throw the ticket away.”Was, a painter, and Eckstrom, a sculptor, began to to make things out of the tickets that represented dreams.“We researched the three things that people buy when they win,” Was said. “And we learned that what they buy are cars, houses and vacations.“So we built a full-sized H3 Hummer out of $39,000 worth of tickets we’d picked up from the ground. It was made of wood and metal and paper, and the tickets were like the exterior paint.“And we made a dining room to represent a dream home. It was a 15-by-30 foot room made of $70,000 in tickets. It had a chandelier and a dining table, and we re-created on the wall some paintings from the National Gallery in London that had been bought with the revenue from the sales of lottery tickets in England. “And for the dream vacation we made an 8-foot circle on wheels with two palm trees and a little island, with waves lapping around it. It moves.”They had planned to take it out as a float at an art parade, Was said, but … a hurricane canceled that parade.That piece did get sold, however, to a buyer in Brussels, Belgium. The Hummer was sold as well. Several of their unsold works were destroyed in the flood at Smack Mellon, along with their raw materials. Was estimated the value of their loss at about $30,000. The emotional impact of course was significant.“We had some crying,” Was said. “We were up here in Wassaic during the storm because we didn’t want our house to flood. It always floods in Wassaic. When we got the news about Smack Mellon, we were pretty shook up. But it was so bad it was almost funny. There was just nothing to be done about it.”Nothing but start over. Anyone who would like to contribute ephemera from the list above is invited to send it to Lauren Was and Adam Eckstrom, PO Box 342, Wassaic, NY 12592. Or send them an email to discuss what you’ve got, at ghostofadream@gmail.com, or call 646-552-8622.

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