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A new publication that asks: Who are these people and what did their music sound like?
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I couldn't let Summer end without producing one more booklet. Public Collectors publication #41 dives into the worlds of unknown amateur guitarists and the online snapshot photography market. This booklet includes reproductions of 21 found snapshots.

This collection started with the photo of a man holding an electric guitar on page three. I found it at a flea market in Chicago back in 2011 and I felt like I could hear the raw amplified sound coming out of that image. I wondered, but could not know, who the guitarist is, if he is still alive, or if he made music professionally.

In 2019, I started thinking about companions for that photo and went down the rabbit hole of searching through photos on eBay.com. On any given day there are well over 100,000 different snapshot photos taken after 1940 listed for sale on that site. Certain sellers are responsible for the bulk of this market and many photos are offered by the same people using several different accounts. It is easy to get lost in these listings for hours, scrolling through thousands of photos that have never circulated in public before, and may never be seen again once they are purchased or the seller stops listing them. Most of the photos are described generically and dispassionately with an inventory number and no backstory. “FOUND COLOR PHOTO MAN WITH MUSTACHE SITTING IN CHAIR HOLDING GUITAR” is one of the photographs in this booklet.

These photos—mostly undated—appear to have been taken from the early 1960s to the early 2000s. My criteria for this collection is that the photo should have an element of mystery and make me want to hear the music the subject plays. I’m more interested in intimate, domestic or outdoor settings than stages. The person in the picture should be an amateur musician, or someone not easily recognizable as a professional artist. I rejected many amateur photos taken at concerts, or where the guitar appears to be just a studio prop for a model to pose with. For me, the photos in this booklet show guitarists in tune with their instruments.

Thank you for continuing to follow Public Collectors and have a lovely Fall season. Hopefully the next time I email you, the only orange thing you'll be able to find in an American office will be a pumpkin.

Marc Fischer / Public Collectors

Public Collectors organizes exhibitions and events, participates in exhibitions organized by others, creates exhibition opportunities for collectors, teaches, lectures, responds to research inquiries, and makes its own publications. The administrator of Public Collectors is Marc Fischer. He is based in Chicago, Illinois.

Our mailing address is:
Public Collectors c/o
Half Letter Press
P.O. Box 12588
Chicago, IL 60612

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Public Collectors organizes exhibitions and events, participates in exhibitions organized by others, creates exhibition opportunities for collectors, teaches, lectures, responds to research inquiries, and makes its own publications. The administrator of Public Collectors is Marc Fischer. He is based in Chicago, Illinois.

Our mailing address is:
Public Collectors c/o
Half Letter Press
P.O. Box 12588
Chicago, IL 60612

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You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list

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Public Collectors · ℅ Half Letter Press · P.O. Box 12588 · Chicago, Il 60612 · USA

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