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Lillian Virginia Mountweazel Entry_edited.jpg

4th Edition of the New Columbia Encyclopedia (1975).

The Lillian Virginia Mountweazel Research Collection:

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Our collection contains a variety of material related to Mountweazel's life*, work, and legacy. 

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While the collection does not have a permanent location, materials in the collection will be displayed to the public at traveling exhibits hosted by various venues around the world.  

 

As new materials are recovered and catalogued, they will be shared.   

Lillian Virgina Mountweazel

Lillian Virginia Mountweazel, 1971.

*Mountweazel was originally brought into this world as a copyright trap by the editors of the New Columbia Encyclopedia. 

 

All the materials presented here as her works are authentic pieces created by other photographers, repurposed or collaged from media that are in the public domain. Key sources include the Flickr Commons, particularly the EPA’s DOCUMERICA program, and the Wikimedia Commons

Featured Subjects

Flags Up 1

Flag's Up!

Flag's Up (1972) was a photo collection commissioned by the United States Post Office Department to promote their newest innovation: the ZIP code. The project aimed to highlight the efficiency and modernization of the postal system through captivating imagery. It was later revealed that the project was actually funded by the Congress for Cultural Freedom, a front organization used by the CIA during the Cold War as part of their propaganda efforts against the Soviet Union. The intent was to showcase the creativity, intellectual freedom, and logistical prowess of the United States. While the collection was exhibited and promoted both domestically and abroad, all U.S. printed copies were tragically destroyed in a mysterious warehouse fire. Initially, blame was directed toward a disgraced former organizer of the 1970 United States postal strike. However, the case was dropped after an embarrassing revelation that the primary suspect was deathly allergic to fire, casting doubt on their involvement. Despite the controversy and loss of the original prints, Flag's Up remains a significant, albeit elusive, part of Mountweazel's legacy. The collection reflects a unique intersection of art, politics, and history during a turbulent era, highlighting the often unseen influences behind cultural projects. The photographs in our possession come from what is believed to be the only known surviving copy of the Flag's Up book, recovered by a researcher at an estate sale in Providence, Rhode Island.

Flags Up! (1964- 1970)

Read an Issue of Combustibles Magazine,

March 3 1972.

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View it Here

Early Years as a Fountain Designer
(1958-1960)

At 16 years old, while still a student at George K. Broomhall High School, Mountweazel won a public design competition for the Korean War Veterans of Ohio Memorial in downtown Beatosu, Ohio.

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Beating 1,421 other competition submissions, her design was chosen with the fountain completed and presented to the public in June 1960.    

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In 2007, the Western Ohio Institute of Architects ranked the memorial No. 10 on their list of Western Ohio’s Favorite Architecture.

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Of all her fountain sketches and designs, it is Mountweazel’s only known completed work. 

NYC Buses (1965-1966).

The Cemeteries of Paris  (1967-1971).