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Fifty years of fun

2018 UPS Flea Market poster illustrated and designed by Chandler O'Leary

This Saturday is the 50th annual UPS Flea Market, hosted by the Puget Sound Women’s League. The event raises money for student scholarships (that’s what the ticket price supports, in case you’re wondering), and features everything from one-of-a-kind art to handmade crafts to rummage-sale-style bargains. There will also be gently-used books for sale, as well as an array of homemade baked goods (in honor of the first Flea Market’s Parisian theme, they’re bringing back French tarts this year!).

I had the honor of designing/illustrating/lettering their poster, logo, social media campaign and other elements this year—it was one of the most fun projects I’ve had in some time (who doesn’t love drawing upside-down garden gnomes?). I’ll also have my usual booth there on Saturday: you’ll find me, Jessica Spring and Maria Jost (plus lots of Dead Feminists goodies) all in one big double booth, #5/6 on the main floor.

2018 UPS Flea Market poster illustrated and designed by Chandler O'Leary
Here’s the scoop:
50th Annual UPS Flea Market
This Saturday, March 17, 2018
9 am to 4 pm, entry fee $5
(8 am early-bird entry fee: $10)
University of Puget Sound Memorial Fieldhouse
N. 11th St. between Alder and Union, Tacoma, WA
See you bright and early on Saturday!
2018 UPS Flea Market poster illustrated and designed by Chandler O'Leary

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Market day

Photo by Chandler O'Leary

First of all, thank you so much for your response to my crazy-long Empire Builder post! Your comments, social media shares, emails, and encouragement have been wonderful—and such a tonic for the nervewracking nature of putting something so personal and complicated into the world. Thank you for that.

Secondly, I was walking around my neighborhood yesterday and I passed this sign—which reminded me that I haven’t mentioned the Flea Market that’s coming up this weekend at the UPS Fieldhouse. The UPS Flea Market has been an annual Tacoma tradition since 1968—and in recent years has been expanded to include artisans and crafters.

(An aside: the new “Fieldhouse Full of Awesome Stuff” title is kind of…um, sort of entirely…all my fault. And it makes me giggle every time I see it in print. My friend Lynn is one of the chairpersons of the market; when they were first considering opening the event to artists, she approached me and Jessica to see if we’d be game to participate. She asked us what we might call the new hybrid event, since “Flea Market” was no longer entirely accurate. We were having just as much trouble describing it as Lynn was, and I just blurted out, “It’s like a whole Fieldhouse full of…AWESOME!” So, yeah. Sorry about that. I wasn’t at my most articulate that day…)

Anyway, Jessica and I will be sharing a booth (#7, on the main floor, if you’re looking for us) again this year, and we’ll each have new goodies (I mean “awesome”) to show you. Here are the details:

47th Annual University of Puget Sound Flea Market
(and Fieldhouse Full of AWESOME)
This Saturday, March 21, 2015
9 am to 4 pm
Regular admission $5 (benefits student scholarships)
NEW THIS YEAR: early-bird admission at the side door, 8:15 am, $10
UPS Fieldhouse
N. 11th St, between Alder and Union, Tacoma, WA

See you on Saturday!

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Trout fishing in Tacoma

Editorial illustration about Richard Brautigan by Chandler O'Leary

When I was growing up I used to raid my dad’s personal collection of books whenever I was looking for new reading material. We had bookcases all over the house, but I could always depend on Dad’s collection for the discovery of a new favorite. Those shelves introduced me to some of my favorite authors, and some of my most vivid memories are recalled passages from Steinbeck, Salinger, Pirsig, Robbins, etc. Dad’s bookcase also exposed me to some seriously weird stuff (which probably explains a thing or two about my tastes and personality), writing that I didn’t begin to understand until years later. One book that I went back to several times, attracted to its sheer strangeness, was Revenge of the Lawn, by Richard Brautigan—the title story was my favorite. I’m pretty sure most of the similes and imagery flew over my teenage head at the time, but I loved the fact that something could be so entertaining and emotional, and yet so bizarre. (And I fully blame Brautigan for my own rambling, tangential, parenthetical writing tendencies.)

Last month I got an email from City Arts, asking if I’d create some lettering and illustrations for a feature story they were doing on Richard Brautigan’s Tacoma roots. I did a double-take—wait a minute, Brautigan lived in Tacoma?

So I re-read “Revenge of the Lawn,” and was amazed at how much my new perspective of being a Washington/Tacoma resident changed the story for me. Even the more straightforward lines like “He was selling a vision of eternal oranges and sunshine door to door in a land where people ate apples and it rained a lot” took on an almost tangible layer of meaning. (I love that “I’ve Been There!” feeling when I read. It makes me want to run and tell everyone I know: See that passage there? I know exactly what he’s talking about!)

Illustrating Brautigan, or text about Brautigan, was a whole different matter, however. What could I possibly say with a picture what such a vividly visual writer hasn’t already said with words? This is the guy who wrote, “The creek was like 12,845 telephone booths in a row with high Victorian ceilings and all the doors taken off and all the backs of the booths knocked out,” after all.

Editorial illustration about Richard Brautigan by Chandler O'Leary

I mulled it over for awhile, and decided to take him literally. This was a pretty odd experience for me, because I was always trained to make illustrations that add to or change the meaning of a text—and to avoid didactic images like the plague. Somehow, though, for this project, I felt that actually cramming as many Victorian-style phone booths as possible onto the spread would highlight the humor and absurdity of Brautigan’s words.

Editorial illustration about Richard Brautigan by Chandler O'Leary

Or maybe I just really wanted to draw pictures of trout.

Editorial illustration about Richard Brautigan by Chandler O'Leary

Anyway, the text is all hand-painted with watercolor in a “trouty” palette, and references Victorian-era typography and psychedelic graphic design (which itself references Victorian-era typography … the trout swallows its tail). If you’re local, you can pick up your copy for free at a whole slew of locations in and around Tacoma this month. The original watercolors are on display in the To the Letter exhibit through April 30.