British
artist Peter R. Mason uses thousands of recycled postage stamps to
create extraordinary pixelated images that look like genuine paintings, from
afar.
Peter R.
Mason was born in Brownhills, England an d studied at the Stafford
College of Art, where he was awarded the National Diploma in Design in Painting
and Lithography, in 1962. After spending his entire life teaching art and
design at secondary schools in Staffordshire, Liverpool and Walsall, Mason
enjoys his retirement and the opportunity to focus on creating unique works of
art with common postage stamps.
Also
known as “Post Pop Art Man” Peter has made name for himself creating tributes
and portraits of some of the most imp0rtant artists and political figures of
the twentieth century, using simple postage stamps. He begins by drawing the
image he wants to produce on a canvas or a large sheet of paper, after which he
divides it into stamp-sized squares. The stamps are then sorted by design,
color and postmark pattern. Each stamp has to be soaked to remove the envelope
backing, then dried, cut and shaped perfectly before being glued in place. By
paying a great deal attention to every detail, Peter R. Mason manages to create
detailed artworks that look like colorful photos of their subjects.
For a
typical 4′ x 3′ postage stamp painting, the artist uses around
3,500 stamps, and his largest works include up to 22,000 of them, so how does
the artist get all the necessary material. His friends and family help out as
much as they can, but the bulk of the stamps comes from English stamp dealers
interested in the creative use of postage stamps.
Peter R.
Mason’s latest stamp masterpiece is a portrait of Prince William and Kate
Middleton, in celebration of their upcoming wedding.
Photos by Peter R. Mason of ThePostPopArtMan.co.uk
The
Postage Stamp Paintings of Peter R. Mason was originally posted at OddityCentral
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