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Update #4: Headline: New Projects Rise From the Ashes of the Old

Posted on September 21, 2009

Hi to all my backers.

I’ve been in touch with a couple of people close to the center of the Shaver Mystery, and my most recent conversations with them have led me to conclude that I need to reconfigure my project a bit. The scope needs to be wider in one sense (to include material from other areas of fringe culture that resonate with Shaver’s ideas), and narrower in another (to focus more on Shaver as a visual artist).

The side effects of this decision are: 1) that a project with an already long time frame has mushroomed into something that may sprawl on endlessly; and 2) the need for immediate seed money seems less pressing in light of that. Projects like this have a tremendously deferred payoff for bystanders—books of this sort can take years to research and write, after all—and that also bothered me a bit. Therefore, I am planning to take down my Shaver Mystery Kickstarter page and suspend funding later tonight.

However, this does not mean that I have abandoned Kickstarter. Although I’ve never been comfortable in the role of palm-out fundraiser, the idea of using Kickstarter as a venue for profitless conceptual art intrigues me. Therefore, I have created and launched a project called “Fund Nothing” that employs Kickstarter’s rules and structure to present an artwork that will yield zero proceeds for me, and a dollar’s worth of meaningless collectible ephemera for everyone else. It’s a stubbornly frivolous piece, with the spectre of the Recession hovering and moaning over it. As far as I know, it’s also the first attempt to repurpose Kickstarter as a virtual exhibition space.

Here’s the URL: http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/167925853/fund-nothing

My work on Richard Shaver is also not over. In the short term, I plan to continue my blog project of writing a primer on the Shaver Mystery, after which the Shaver Mystery Project will be devoted to occasional posts on his art. Once the primer is complete, I will also be spinning my work off into two other blogs. The first will be called “Remembering Lemuria,” and will deal with the wider history of homespun American fringe religions. The second will be more closely related to the field of art criticism, and will scavenge its ugly name (to be revealed later) from an old creative writing blog that I sent into hiding after 2006. These blogs will go live over the next couple of weeks. If you’re interested in either of them, you can e-mail me for more information at jeffedwardsjc@yahoo.com.

Finally, I want to take this opportunity to thank all of you who have pledged money toward this project. Your support is deeply and genuinely appreciated, and I hope we cross paths again.

Take care.

Jeff

Update #3: New post at the Shaver Mystery Project blog

Posted on September 5, 2009

Hi, everyone. I've just posted a new entry at my Shaver Mystery Project blog, discussing Richard Shaver's early life from 1907 to early 1932. I will be following up by the end of the weekend with another post discussing the chaotic and sometimes tragic decade from 1932 to 1942, when Shaver's life took a series of radical turns and the foundations of the Shaver Mystery were set.

Check it out at shavermystery.wordpress.com.

Jeff

Update #2: A jump to the recommendations queue, and a new blog post

Posted on September 1, 2009

My project has made the “recommended” page at Kickstarter! Needless to say, I’m incredibly happy about this, not only because it will generate more traffic for the proposal, but also because it will introduce a lot more people to Richard Shaver.

At the moment, I am working on several posts for my Shaver Mystery blog that will present a basic primer of the convoluted Shaver mythos. New entries will go up every day or so over the next couple of weeks. In the meantime, there is a fresh post describing some of the topics that will be covered. Check it out at shavermystery.wordpress.com.

Jeff

Update #1: Many thanks to my first backers!

Posted on August 30, 2009

After a couple of false starts, a new video is up for my project.
Also, to Staci, Amy, and Aaron: thanks so much for your pledges! I really appreciate your support!

10
Backers
$301
pledged of $3,000 goal

Funding Canceled

Funding for this project was canceled by the project creator on September 21, 2009.

Pledge $5 or more

2 Backers

A custom-made, full color 1.25 inch-wide round button featuring the phrase “I remember Lemuria!” designed just for this project!

Pledge $20 or more

3 Backers

The “I remember Lemuria!” button from above, plus a full color, 1.75 inch-wide round button that reads “Tero” if worn upright, or “Dero” if worn upside-down. Show your true colors!

Pledge $50 or more

0 Backers

Both buttons from above, plus a limited-edition audio CD of readings from the works of Richard Shaver and Ray Palmer, done by your humble author and friends!

Pledge $100 or more

0 Backers

The buttons and CD from above, plus an archival digital print of a Shaver-related pulp magazine image, scanned from my own collection of Shaver Mystery material!

Pledge $200 or more

0 Backers

The buttons, CD, and print, plus your choice between: 1) a paperback copy of the legendary first Shaver Mystery story “I Remember Lemuria!” and its sequel “The Return of Sathanas”; or 2) “I Contacted an Unknown Race,” a pamphlet containing the early history of the Shaver Mystery by Ray Palmer, along with an article about the primal language Mantong by Richard Shaver!

Project By

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I am a graduate of the MFA program in Art Criticism and Writing at the School of Visual Arts (SVA) in New York City. In Spring 2010, I will teach undergraduate classes at SVA on the essay as a literary and artistic form, and the influence of magic, meditative traditions, and theories of primitivism on modern art. I also have an essay in an upcoming catalog for an exhibition of the works of artist Tobi Kahn at the Museum of Biblical Art in New York, opening in October 2009.