Welcome to Cottonwood Springs, a fictional,
pre-1912 cosmology.
You have landed in the raw chronological
archive of field art.
To observe to physical labor, process, footnotes, and endnotes behind these intercepts, consult Examine the Evidence in the menu.
I Wonder About My Phantoms
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: Voluntary Patients in Asylums by Stanley Haynes, 1869.
The Dream of Inevitability
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: The Inevitable by by Philip Verrill Mighels, 1902.
When My Dreams Take Me
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: Rhymes of Camp and Hearth by Theodore J. Eckerson, 1881.
No One Cared
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: “Nature Cared For and Nature Uncared For; The Results upon the Hearts of Men. A Lecture on Ornithology,” delivered by Henry Bendelack Hewetson, 1879.
Final Rupture
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: Anatomy of the Parts Concerned in Femoral Rupture by George William Callender, 1863.
I Dream’d That You Were Dead
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: “I Wept, Beloved, as I Dreamed” by Georges Hüe, 1911.
Curious Epiphanies
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: Curious Epitaphs by William Andrews, 1899.
Dream States in Another’s Care
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: “Report of the Committee on the Bill Appointing Commissioners to Locate a Second State Lunatic Asylum by New York (State),” 1855.
Harmful Effects
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: The Relations of The Medical Witness with The Law and The Lawyer by Samuel Parkman, Samuel, 1852.
How to Dream
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: How to Sew by National Correspondence School of Dressmaking, 1904.
I Dreamed of the Raven
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: Breeding of the Raven in Pennsylvania by by Richard C Harlow, 1911.
Breathe Through My Dream
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Image source: Keep Your Mouth Shut by Fred Smith and Swan M. Burnett, 1893.
What Must You Ask Yourself
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: What Must I Do to Get Well? And How Can I Keep So? by Elma Stuart, 1898.
Reject Not a Bad Dream
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: Eat Not Thy Heart by Julien Gordon, 1897.
Imagination Alchemy
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: Mental Alchemy by B. Brown Williams, 1853.
What Can I Know
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: What Can She Do? by Edward Payson Roe, 1873.
Half-Terrors Process
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Image source: Studies in Cell-Division by Douglas H. Campbell, 1890.
Intellectual Myopia
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Image source: A Popular Description of the Human Eye by William Whalley, 1874.
Collate My Dreams
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: Footnotes to Canadian Folksongs by William Wood, 1896.
Composite Portrait of my Illusions
Image Source: The Laws of Contrast of Colour by Michel Eugène Chevreul, 1861.
Source: Composite Photography Applied to the Portraits of Shakespeare by Walter Rogers Furness, 1885.
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It holds everything that was found, blacked out, scribbled over, finished, unfinished, discarded. It all counts.
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