Hope this has not been posted before. An interesting read from yesterday's Los Angeles Times.
Painted dogs have
their day
'Danger dog' signs by Nepal artists are in demand in L.A.
A Santa Monica resident
tries to keep an old tradition alive by selling works by artists in Nepal.
By Bettijane Levine
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
April 24, 2008
WHEN she first went to Nepal
in 1986, Michelle Page was struck by images of dogs hand-painted on metal signs
hung above shops. "They were beautiful, personable dogs," she says.
"Not generic, but very specific different breeds and sizes, as if the
artists actually knew the dogs they were painting."
Some artworks were naive in style, others very detailed, Page says. She soon
realized that artisans in Nepal
were painting all sorts of animals on those 1-foot-square metal sheets. Signs
with a pig, goat or chicken denoted the butcher shop within.
But the dogs were the most compelling and unforgettable. Some were the
equivalent of "beware of dog" signs one might see here. Others
translated into something more benign: "Brilliant dog in here."
Page, an assistant film editor who lives in Santa Monica,
returned to Nepal
repeatedly. Four years ago, she noticed that the dog signs she loved so much
were being replaced by more contemporary and commercial versions:
computer-generated images mass-produced on vinyl. She started collecting the
old "danger dog" signs she found in shops. Then she sought out the
studios where artisans created the signs, as well as banners and license
plates. In June she traveled to Nepal
again and returned with 100 dog signs commissioned from artisans whose work she
particularly liked.
"It's just a hobby, not my vocation," says Page, who thought she'd
try to find a market here for the work.
The signs sold out in weeks, so Page returned to Nepal in December for 300 more dog
paintings, some of which now go for $150 at the Santa
Monica Museum of Art and the Craft and Folk
Art Museum. Page has started up her own website,
nepaldog.com, and has even begun taking
orders for custom portraits. Clients send a photo of their dog (or rabbit or
cat) to Nepal
with Page, and she commissions three or four artisans to paint the animal's
image on metal. Clients pick the version they like (for $200), and she sells
the rest.
Christine Knoke, a curator at the Norton
Simon Museum
in Pasadena, says she saw the "danger
dogs" at the Santa Monica
museum store.
"I was fascinated by them and their folk-art quality," says Knoke,
who has commissioned portraits of her own three dogs.
Page says her side business has yet to break even, but she likes the idea of
keeping alive the work of artists so far away. "Their income from painting
signs is dwindling because of new technology," she says. "It's no
different there than anywhere else."