ron paul signs

the reversible ron paul landscape by Warrior Ant Press Worldwide Anthill Headquarters in Kansas City, Missouri, USA.


Additional things to do with Ron Paul signs left by the side of the road.
This is a reversible sign. We've transformed the front, informed by the landscape just outside of Denver, a place I hope to be come August, into a mountainous terrain. This is where the only hopeful convention action will be during the summer.

The Republican convention, to be held this year in Minneapolis, will have all the drama of lunchtime at the geriatric center. The best you can hope for, is that at some point, a food fight erupts in the cafeteria or that Cheney's heart has to be re-started during one of his speeches - and he carries on without missing a line. The Republican view of the environment has been as just another product to be bought and sold - pretty much they way they view everything else.

Images: top: front of Reversible Ron Paul Landscape.
middle: Denver International Airport
bottom: back of Reversible Ron Paul Landscape
Reversible Ron Paul Landscape, acrylic on found object, 2008, m.o.i., 12" x 24"
elsewhere:
m.o.i: road side shelter for libertarians
m.o.i.: ron paul enters the twilight zone
m.o.i.: belief change
m.o.i.: the caucus badge

more things to do with ron paul signs left by the side of the road by Warrior Ant Press Worldwide Anthill Headquarters in Kansas City, Missouri, USA.


Shelter #2, from the series: Things to do with Ron Paul Signs Left by the Side of the Road. Original dimensions 24' x 36'; current dimensions 24' x 6' x 36' installed. Acrylic on found objects. 2008, m.o.i.

The interstate seems to be a prime focus of the rogue Ron Paul sign. One is left to wonder what the penultimate expression of signage might be if Mr. Paul were to gain the nomination. Would there just be no limit to the signs, would thousands line the roadways like flags during a holiday? Would those opposed to the clutter, have to sue the perpetrators proving we've suffered an economic loss before such actions would be deemed inappropriate?

I was also thinking about the housing crisis while making this piece. Owning your own home has been part of the decreed American Dream for some years, but is that changing? Perhaps Americans are tiring of owning their own home. If you work all the time, or worse yet, if both partners work all the time, and you both have a heavy commute, and you travel frequently, or God forbid, there's the combination of all those factors, maybe owning your own home isn't the right approach. Who has time for all the yard work? What if you get upside on your mortgage? And is this the best use of your time? your money?

The original sign had all the appearances of being slapped together by a construction worker after a long day of listening to right-wing airwave nuts rant about individual rights over societal rights. The support frame was screwed together with rough-in screws and the base was made from two small dish tubs with a small amount of leftover concrete to serve as weight. Whoever made the sign didn't do a good job of calculating the weight needed to keep it upright and they made no effort to rectify their mistake.

The sign appeared one morning by the freeway along my commute and by the afternoon winds had blown it over. After a couple of weeks of seeing it laying in the ditch, I decided it's original purpose was due for reinvention.

elsewhere:

m.o.i.: ron paul enters the twilight zone
m.o.i.: belief change
m.o.i.: the caucus badge

ron paul signs enter the twilight zone by Warrior Ant Press Worldwide Anthill Headquarters in Kansas City, Missouri, USA.



Shelter no.1 from the series: Things to do with Ron Paul signs left by the side of the road. Original dimensions 24' x 36'; current dimensions 24' x 5.5' x 14'. Acrylic on found object. m.o.i. 2008

The impetus for this remake of the Ron Paul sign was the Army Corps of Engineers logo. It seemed fitting for a number of reasons.

Both Paul and the Corps seem intractable. There's lots of talking around ideas, but once you bore down into them, they seem to be offering the same idea, over and over, just slightly repackaged. Insular. Myopic. Fearful of change. I got an email from some Corps dude recently and he described a meeting as an "opportunity to create situational awareness". More than a few 9th-Wardians wish the Corps had a little more situational awareness prior to Katrina.

You'll notice there are no doors and no drawbridge on either the Paul castle or the Corp castle logo. OK, I stand corrected. The Corps logo does have a door, it's just guarded by toy soldiers. If you're not already inside, you can't enter, and once you enter, there's no leaving. Perhaps I should rename the piece, Twilight Zone.

The original Pual sign was recovered from a ravine adjacent to a suburban McMansion development called The Wilderness, the name of which refers to what was in place before being replaced by lawns manufactured by ChemGrow. Battle stations honey -- the dandelions are advancing! and Survivor is on in 10 minutes.

elsewhere:
m.o.i.: belief change
m.o.i.: the caucus badge

things to do with ron paul signs left by the side of the road by Warrior Ant Press Worldwide Anthill Headquarters in Kansas City, Missouri, USA.


More from the ubiquitous series: things to do with ron paul signs left by the side of the road

You've seen them everywhere--Ron Paul signs. One has to give Mr. Paul credit, he either had the largest sign budget of all the candidates or his supporters really love to use a stencil. One of most reproduced was a reworked image from a Crirque de Soleil logo for a Beatles tribute -- The Ron Paul Revo(Evo)lution. Unfortunate for Mr. Paul, once they moved past the medium, they arrived at the message.

But what happens to those signs after the primary, after the caucus, after Ron Paul has conceeded defeat?

Apparently, Ron Paul supporters have a lot more energy for making signs, than retrieving them. Plus they like to plant them in public spaces, which technically is against the law, but something easily overlooked in the fervor of a campaign. But there comes a time when the sign clutter gets a little out of hand and as one who works on litter clean-ups, there's enough trash, without political trash, laying around the planet.

So what to do?

One option is to make more signs! Of rival political candidates who are still in the race. Belief Change was made from a recycled Ron Paul Revolution sign, found in one of our public parks a month after the primary. It seemed appropriate to use this sign to mark another revolution of sort trying to make it's way across the country. For this sign, Obama's features have been blended with a youthful Muhammad Ali, because in many cases America seems to have a similar response to the two.

Back in the early 60's, when Ali, then known as Cassius Clay, was winning the Olympic Gold Medal as an American, and strutting around ring waving a tiny US flag, he became an instant hero. Not just at home, but around the world. Ali practically invented the wordy, self-hype that today has become the staple of athletes and politics everywhere. But when Clay, converted to Islam and changed his name to Muhammad Ali, doubts began to spring up, especially when Ali decided it was in his, and the country's best interest, not to enter the army while thousands of brothers were being served up in Vietnam for an unjust, unwinnable war.

Ali, the black man with a voice and not afraid to use it, became the anti-Elvis for many people. Elvis, if you remember, served in the Army with all the panache of one of his B-movies, and it was while stationed in Germany that he met Priscilla and the rest, one might say, "is Vegas".

Ali, was stripped of his heavy-weight crown, remained famous, and eventually was able to mount a successful comeback once America came to it's senses about Vietam. But his vocal stylings took a toll on his career. By some accounts Ali is the most recognizable person in the world today, but his tendency to speak his mind, and to confront the politics of race, exposed the open wound of racism that is still evident in America. Just ask Hillary Clinton, John McCain, right-wing talk radio hosts, and perhaps your father.

In some ways, the Obama ascendancy has followed a similar arc - at least on the rise. People love to believe, but they don't necessary want to change. Change is a lot more difficult to effect, than belief, although one follows from the other. If Obama does succeed in winning the nomination and then the general election, he will become the most recognizable person on the planet.

Belief Change, acrylic and duct tape on found political sign, 31' x 39', 2008, m.o.i.

elsewhere:
moi: the caucus badge

ron paul liberty poster
i support ron paul poster
nytimes, ron paul graphics revolution