Published by
Princeton Architectural Press
37 East Seventh Street
New York, New York 10003 Visit our website at www.papress.com. 2002 Princeton Architectural Press
All rights reserved
This Princeton Architectural Press edition published in 2015. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner without written permission from the publisher, except in the context of reviews. Every reasonable attempt has been made to identify owners of copyright. Errors or omissions will be corrected in subsequent editions. Editor: Jennifer Lippert
Design Direction: Evan Schoninger
Designer & Illustrator: Ian Phillips
Cover photography: Benjamin English, Kevin Lippert Special thanks to: Meredith Baber, Sara Bader, Nicola Bednarek Brower, Janet Behning, Erin Cain, Megan Carey, Carina Cha, Andrea Chlad, Tom Cho, Barbara Darko, Benjamin English, Russell Fernandez, Jan Cigliano Hartman, Jan Haux, Mia Johnson, Diane Levinson, Katharine Myers, Jaime Nelson, Rob Shaeffer, Sara Stemen, Marielle Suba, Kaymar Thomas, Paul Wagner, Joseph Weston, and Janet Wong of Princeton Architectural PressKevin C.
Lippert, publisher ISBN 978-1-61689-396-5 (paperback)
ISBN 978-1-61689-429-0 (epub, mobi) The Library of Congress has cataloged the original issue as follows:
Phillips, Ian.
Lost : lost and found pet posters from around the world / Ian Phillips.
1 v. (unpaged) : ill. (some col.), maps ; 19 cm.
ISBN 1-56898-337-9 (alk. paper : pbk.)
1. PostersCatalogs. 2.
PetsPostersCatalogs. 3. Pet lossPostersCatalogs. 4. Phillips, IanPoster collectionsCatalogs. 5.
PostersPrivate collectionsCanadaCatalogs. I. Title: Lost and found pet posters from around the world. II. Title
NC1764.8.A54 P49 2002
743.6-dc21 2001007799
Acknowledgments
Thank you to everyone who contributed posters to the collection over the years. Special thanks to Grant Heaps, Sonja Ahlers, George Banton, Peter Buchanan-Smith, Patricia Collins, Rachel Crossley, Mike Dyar, Derek McCormack, Mark Pawson, Julee Peaslee, Stangroom, and Gerardo Ypiz.
This book is dedicated to the memory of Fancy Pants Polanski.
About the author
Ian Phillips works as an illustrator and designer for books, magazines, and newspapers. In his spare time he runs a small press. His small hand-bound books are on the shelves of book collectors worldwide and have appeared in galleries from Moscow to San Francisco. He makes his home in Toronto.
Dog Gone
I collect lost pet posters.
Each one is a heartbreaking story about love, loss, and friendship, illustrated with folksy artwork. Though they're cheaply made and quickly destroyed, pet owners pour their hearts into them, exposing deep emotions to an unknown telephone-pole audience. I own posters that bemoan the loss of everything from cats and dogs to ferrets and cows. One poster of a lost dog turns out to be a message from a jilted lover to her lost boyfriend. "Tell him to call," it says. Another poster includes only the plaintive plea: "Turtle.
Find him." As a child, I was allowed to have only small pets like goldfish or hamsters. The hamsters were forever breaking out of their cages and running away. But not too far. It was too snowy in northern Ontario, where I grew up. I usually found my pets underneath the refrigerator or living inside the walls, so I never had to put up "missing hamster" posters in my neighborhood. I started collecting lost pet posters when I was living in Switzerland.
My roommate had a cat that climbed out of the window and along the ledge to visit a neighbor's cat. One day "Nava" fell off the roof of our five-story apartment building and disappeared. My distraught roommate put up missing cat posters everywhere in the neighborhood. After a couple of weeks, we received a call. A veterinarian had performed surgery on Nava's broken paws, legs, and jaw. A medical bill for over 3000 Swiss francs had to be paid in order to retrieve the cat.
My roommate paid the sum. A few years later Nava ran away from his new home in the country and was never seen again. I wanted to see what missing pet posters looked like in other parts of the world. I advertised in a variety of zines and contacted a network of friends, family, penpals, and artists. News about my collection spread. Posters began arriving from Australia, Japan, Europe, and across North and South America.
I also received flea collars, dog tags, paintings of chickens, and a lot of letters. One letter from someone in Iceland explained that people in Iceland don't lose their pets and that I would never get a poster from anyone there. Another letter from the Netherlands told me: We just dont do that sorta thing in Holland. Lose a pet and the thing to do is go out and buy a new one. This anthology contains my absolute favorite posters. Watch out for a rat named "Poison"; a 10,000 dollar reward; pets lost in bag-snatchings, earthquakes, and carjackings; pets lost by babysitters; Pudding, Piggy, Porky Pie; cats with extra toes; dogs with no legs; Toto, Kitty Lang, Elvis, and Grizzabella.
If you start your own collection, replace posters you remove with new ones: if you remove one, make copies and put ten back. Meow.
Population of Missing Pets
Dogs
Nova Scotia CANADA
Hawaii USA
Ontario CANADA
Pennsylvania USA
California USA
Natsu JAPAN
Is this a missing dog poster or a missing boyfriend? Maryland USA
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