Welcome to Cottonwood Springs, a fictional,
pre-1912 cosmology.
You have landed in the raw chronological
archive of field art.
To observe the physical labor, process, footnotes, and endnotes behind these intercepts, consult Examine the Evidence in the menu.
Memory and Imagination
Memory and Imagination
A sensitive and imaginative mind frequently sees the phantoms during sleep.
Memory and Imagination active something more:
the brightness and distinction of reality.
Text source: Illustrations of the Influence of the Mind Upon the Body in Health and Disease by Daniel Hack Tuke, 1884.Image source: The Principles of Light and Color by Edwin D. Babbitt, 1896.
Codify the Best Dreams
Image source: A Treatise on the Kaleidoscope by David Brewster, 1819.
I Imagined Wholeness Inherent
Source: Catalogue of Surgical Instruments, etc. by Hockin, Wilson & Co; Royal College of Surgeons of England, 1895.
I've Wondered in Dreams
Source: I've Wandered in Dreams: A Favorite Duet by Josesph Augustine Wade Esqr., 1830,
What If Any Changes
Source: 1851-1878 Illustrated Catalogue and Price List of Optical, Meteorological and Mathematical Instruments Manufactured and Imported by Goldbacher, 1879.
A Piece of Knowledge
Source: Catalogue of Patent Diamond Diffusive Reflectors and Lamps by Klemm & Company Publication, 1900.
Can I Recognize New Brilliancy
Image source: Physiology of the Eye, and History of Sight-Restoring Inventions from 1851 to 1873, 1873.
How Can I Cure My Indignation?
Image source: The Beauty of the Heavens by Charles F. Blunt, 1842.
Common Torments
Source: The Commercial Forest Trees of Massachusetts by Daniel Allen Clarke, 1908.
Where are your dreams?
Source: Pennsylvania Tunnel and Terminal R.R. by Pennsylvania Tunnel and Terminal Railroad, 1910.
Dreaming in Women
Source: A Digest of Metabolism Experiments in which the Balance of Income and Outgo was Determinedby Charles Ford Langworthy, 1898.
This archival drawer holds completed work, scraps, rough edges, and ongoing mistakes.
It holds everything that was found, blacked out, scribbled over, finished, unfinished, discarded. It all counts.
Come back next week to see more ephemera.
Source: Why is History Read So Little? by Edward Denham, 1876.
Source: How to be Healthy by J. Halpenny, 1911.
Image source: Catalogue of Apparatus by Daniel Davis, 1852.
Image source: What is Electricity? by John Trowbridge, 1896.

Source: Library School Rules, Melvil Dewey, 1905.