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Found Photographs of Buckaroos and Buckarettes An Interview with Tattered and Lost



We'll do everyone a favor and share the incredible vernacular "found" photographs of Tattered and Lost, a kindred soul who over the last few years has produced an ongoing series of wonderful books drawn from what has to be one of the finest collections of snapshots in the country.  Tattered and Lost flies under the radar…so we invited TL to open up a bit with a brief cyber-intereview.  If you collect vintage photographs you will enjoy





Q:  I love the photograph in Buckaroos and Buckarettes of the black cowpokes.  I always wanted to be a black cowboy.

A:  I know what you mean. I want to be a black cowboy too. I was thrilled when I found the shot!

Q:  How did you begin collecting found photographs?

A.  Actually the first photos I bought were of, I believe, German actors each holding the same urn. It was somewhere around ’71-72. I’d gone to Nevada City in the Sierra’s and was looking through an antique store. The only thing I found I could afford on my college budget were these two old photos. I think I paid a 50 cents or a dollar for each. They were cabinet cards and I imagine today they’d still sell for about a buck each if found in a bin. I was fascinated to think that these cards had somehow ended up in a store in the Gold Country of California. I always imagined them being from a theater troupe that toured the old West. They were just as likely to have come from a German immigrant who didn’t arrive here until the 1960s, but I like my story better. And the two old Germans are at the end of the first post I ever did at my blog on November 14, 2008.

Then for awhile I used to visit a little town called Port Costa, along the Carquinez Straight in Northern California, that at the time had a lot of antique stores. They had old cabinet cards and other photos for sale, cheap. By the time I moved to L. A. I had enough, along with my L. A. roommate’s photos, to decorate our living room wall. People would come in and see the shots and ask about the relatives. I’d laugh and say, “Haven’t a clue who they are.” At this point I wasn’t taking collecting serious, thus the stupidity of putting them on a wall that got the afternoon sun. Surprisingly they survived. And the reactions from the people who asked about them was generally the same. No comment. They really couldn’t understand hanging photos of unknown dead people on the wall. It was decades before I started collecting again.

Around ten years ago I started collecting with serious intent, the intent being to amuse myself. My best friend got me started by sending me some photos of a woman she determined was named Rosa. That sort of lit the fire. I avoided eBay for a lot of reasons. The prices were too high and I hated bidding on something, getting my hopes up, and having it snatched away by someone else. Plus it just didn’t feel as if I was “discovering” the image. You know what it’s like. That moment you spot something and your heart starts racing. You know only you are at that moment in love with the object and have to have it. That was easier to handle than thinking about people all over the world salivating over the same thing. I eventually broke down and started perusing ebay. Now if I find something I want I’ll think about it far too much and hope beyond hope that nobody else wants it too. I generally do not bid against someone. I can’t bare the heartache…or the inflated prices.

Now I’m deep into the obsession. I crave my next photo fix. Like you I’m basically late to the game, but trying to make up for lost time.

Q.  I hate when I see photographs in a box in an antique mall labeled "instant relatives" as it cheapens them.  What I like about your books is that they are thematic.  I always collect with a specific notion or project in mind.  Do you?

A.  I agree about the “instant relatives” signs. I often have people walk by and snicker at the sign as I’m busily trying to sort through the bins. They’ll casually stop, pick up a few snapshots, then toss them back like flotsam and walk away laughing after trying to engage me with some silly remark. I smile and say, “Yeah, uh huh” then go back to sorting. I’m always happy to see they don’t “get it” so I don’t have to jockey for space while sorting.

I have to say that it’s really only recently that I’ve started refining my searches. I generally don’t leave the house with a preconceived notion of what I want. I get excited when I find something for one of my silly categories, like “people cutting cakes.” But that’s just for estate sales, flea markets, and antique stores. Ebay is a different matter. I do make a point of focusing on specifics when I search there, otherwise I’d be living in my car in a few weeks. I try to stay focused, but occasionally click on a seller who has something I like and the next thing I know I’m staring at a bunch of images on the screen and repeating over and over again, “I want this. You don’t need it. I know, but I want this.” I think you’re probably much better at staying focused than I am.

However, I do now find myself coming up with ideas for books that I’d like to create. And sometimes the idea for a book doesn’t come to me until I notice the similarity in some photos in my collection. That will focus me and I have to remind myself to not put a lot of pressure on myself to only find items that fit the parameters I’ve set. I’ll just end up coming home from the out-and-abouts feeling I wasted my time. I figure instead I’ll just wait to see what I find because eventually some of those items might coalesce into a new idea for a book. Basically for me it’s a crap shoot. Thrilled if I find something I consider great, but happy if I find an old snapshot of the guy I named Ernie. Just happy to bring home little treasures.

Q.  Can you pick "an Ernie" and explain what makes a great Ernie?

A.  Ahh, Ernie. Ernie is a real fellow, but I have no idea what his name is. Several years ago, on Christmas Eve, I was at one of my favorite antique stores with a friend who’d come for Christmas. Together we started finding photos of this one very ordinary looking fellow, himself surrounded by Christmas. I ended up doing a four day post about him called “One Man’s Christmas.”  A reader asked if she could call him Ernie. I said yes, and the name stuck.

Over the next few years I’d always look for photos of Ernie, hoping to construct more of his life. Eventually all I could find were photos of his wife and kids so I added those to the collection. Ernie now is a perfect example of the saying I came up with a few years ago when someone asked me what vernacular photography is. I thought for a moment then said, “Photographs of the ordinary by the ordinary.”

I often tell people about the time a woman in an antique store indirectly told me, as I sorted through a bin, that what I was doing was disgusting. Where she saw only photos of dead people, I saw photos of life. Collecting these images is saving some of the history of the everyday folks who go through life unnoticed.

And collecting these old images is as close as I’ll get to time travel.

The Five volumes of the Tattered and Lost series are available from Amazon HERE
The Tattered and Lost Blog, which is essential, is HERE


Orange Crate Art Still On the Crate


I don't really understand fruit crate label collectors and suspect most of the shiny, pristine examples you see are fake.  But then I'm no expert.  This one, while hardly pristine, is real. 
Found in Michigan 2014.  Collection Jim Linderman

Additional Photographs of Blacaman for BLACAMAN AND GABRIEL GARCIA MARQUEZ CHEAT DEATH by Jim Linderman




Additional Blacaman Photographs collection Jim Linderman
Read the Story BLACAMAN AND GABRIEL GARCIA MARQUEZ CHEAT DEATH at the Paraphilia Magazine Site HERE

Fruit Crate Jar Bottle Rim Toss Sewing Spool Folk Art Game




Fruit Crate Jar Bottle Rim Toss Sewing Spool Folk Art Game.  Third in the Make-Do Game Series  Depression era?  Homemade Carnival  Collection Jim Linderman

Brush Bristle Folk Art Target with Bow and Arrows


Brush Bristle Folk Art Target with Bow and Arrows.  Not shown, the bow.  There is no identification or company name, so this may be handmade.  Safer than real arrows, and the bristle-tipped arrows stick fine!  Make do created from a floor cleaner?  Original paint with four "arrows" and a handmade 22" bow. 

Collection Jim Linderman

Coming Soon, Again!


Just for the record, the book THE BIRTH OF ROCK AND ROLL is sold out, but it is being reprinted by a major publisher. Stay tuned, and thank you!  Jim Linderman

Homemade Baseball Peg Game with Rolling Play Dice


Homemade Baseball Peg Game with Rolling Play Dice.  No date, typewriter era!
Collection Jim Linderman

Spikehorn the Bear Man of Michigan




John "Spikehorn" Meyers.  See also HERE

The Accidentals The Best Unsigned Band in America?

(Photo Anna Sink/Local Spins credit)

One of the best unsigned bands in America is a duo of 18 year old women from Traverse City, Michigan.  Home of the National Cherry Festival.  That is a long way from wherever current pop "role models" Miley Cyrus and Justin Bieber live, but the Mitten state grows as much talent as fruit, and it has since John Lee Hooker moved up to perform for Automobile workers after the big one. 

Katie Larson and Savannah Buist are recent graduates of the first singer-songwriter major program at Interlochen Center for the Arts.  It is one of the most acclaimed music schools in the world,  yet the Accidentals are far from snooty.  They have somehow managed to retain an authenticity and heartbreaking musical pathos I equate with the school of Harry Smith and Alan Lomax.  I have every reason to believe The Accidentals will achieve the level of American greats.  You would think me kidding if I named a few in the sphere I think of, but then I saw the 27-Grammy Award winning Alison Krauss perform at age 18 too, and as Levon Helm once said "lightning can strike twice" after all.  I have seen the Accidentals perform and felt those sparks, and if dear Levon were still here I would tell him.  I am not exaggerating.  The Accidentals could have owned Levon's barn stage easily, and I know that too.



The Accidentals could already be considered successful, I suppose, with FIVE HUNDRED gigs already behind them.  Between them they play a dozen instruments.  They sing, at times, with a perfect dissonant aching (some of which you can see in their faces as they occur in the clips here) and they support each other like hired professionals.  They met at age 15 in public school, maintained their 3.9 grade points and practiced.  They both come from musical families.  I have chosen to include two acoustic performances here, but in performance they can rock.  Their live act is frequently electric.  The stage patter and presence is polished but real.  They switch instruments before the song they have finished sinks in.  A 45 minute set passes like a train.  They already have more good originals than most hit acts, and their tastefully eccentric list of covers, well... covers the gamut.  They pack performing space with a multi-generational mix any act would beg for.  Their song The Silence has talon hooks, a mature mastery of dynamics and is as good as anything I've heard in a decade.  The studio version is HERE and you will find the lyrics HERE.  It approaches standard.  If you write songs, you know what standard means.


And they will grow.

I am not producer, critic or musician, but I have seen a good two dozen of the performers in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and many of them in venues smaller than the Accidentals regularly play.  I have been fortunate enough to have made a few small contacts in the music world… if my post here reaches any of them I will have done what I can, and when one day one of them says to me "why didn't you tell me" I won't have to say I didn't try.

The Accidentals website is HERE.  Their Music is HERE.  They have a YouTube Channel.  If they play near you, and they will, see them.  Thank you to critic and writer John Sinkevics for alerting me to The Accidentals  

Polaroid Pack Film Portraits of Wood and a free preview of I'm with Dummy by Jim Linderman









Anonymous Polaroid Pack Film Portraits, No Date circa 1970s Collection Jim Linderman
You may also be interested in the Book and Ebook "I'm With Dummy : Vent Figures and Blockheads" avalable from Blurb.com.

A Good Man



A Good Man Carved Folk Art Hinged Box with Surprise.  
No Date Collection Jim Linderman




Times Square 42nd Street 1949 Original Vintage Snapshot



Hopefully, some of you know I have been working on a book project which will tell the true story of the art and cultural changes brought by the underground artists, writers, publishers and merchants who were active in the 1950s and early 1960s in New York City.  

TIMES SQUARE SMUT is going really well, and I am now at the point of locating images I hope will be useful to the artist I will commission to do the cover.  This snapshot shows ground zero of smut...and will be helpful.  A mere block from the location of the bookstores I am more interested in...but the book will tell a far more decentralized story.  From time to time I make excerpts available.  Be an adult.

One of my favorite buildings is just visible back in the horizon.  The old McGraw-Hill building which has blue/green terra-cotta ceramic tiles on the exterior, and I am pleased to see it has been landmarked.  The dapper fellow walking to work unfazed by the activity around him?  I am hoping to have him rendered either a pornographer, a censor or a patron.

Original anonymous snapshot 1949 collection Jim Linderman

Baby Centaur and his Friends Sketchbook circa 1910



Baby Centaur and his friends found in a circa 1910 Sketchbook
Collection Jim Linderman

Make Do Wall Hanging Candle Box with two inscised relief carved Nudes Erotic Folk Art



Antique Folk Art Wall Hanging Candle Box with inscised relief carved Nudes
Folk Art Sculpture.  Collection Jim Linderman

Eccentric Fashion Drawings Dull Tool Dim Bulb Annual "I'm Not at the Outsider Art Fair" Exhibition








Eccentric Fashion Drawings 1944  (all detail scans) Each 10 x 15 Collection Jim Linderman

I try to post a group of unusual artworks every year around Outsider Art Fair time.  Fashion drawings, to my knowledge, haven't yet made an appearance  at the Outsider Art Fair yet.  These are nice ones. 

Art and Photography Books and $5.99 Ebooks by the author are available for preview or purchase HERE