The following was copied from my article at Aisling.net. (That’s my website – and nom de plume – for my extreme and experimental art projects.)
What is Mailart?
Mailart (also called “mail art”) is art sent through the mail, and it’s visible on the outside of the postcard, envelope, or (less often) the package. That is, the visible part of what goes through the mail IS the art. There may or may not be art – or anything – inside.
The visible art – seen by those who handle the art (from sender to post office staff to recipient) – may be decorated with many things, including…
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- Artistamps
- Artwork (hand-drawn or painted)
- Collage art elements
- Rubber stamps (hand-carved or commercial, used creatively)
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Sometimes, the art is mass-produced, albeit on a small scale. That is, it’s printed in limited numbers and applied (or turned into) the postcard, envelope, or package.
In some cases, each piece of mailart is signed and numbered. (For example, “5/25” would mean the individual piece is #5 of a total of 25 created and mailed.)
Here are six of my mailart postcards, sent in 2023. Each recipient received a handcrafted postcard decorated with a one-of-a-kind torn paper collage on it.

And here’s one of my 2025 artcards, part of an early 2026 digital installation:

What are Artistamps?
Artistamps are art, in the form of a postage-type stamp. They’re also called faux postage, among other names that mean “fake postal stamps with art on them.” (Other terms for these faux stamps include postoids and cinderellas.)
Here’s one of my favorite artistamps. I created it using a photo from one of my visits to Avebury, England, where – unlike Stonehenge – you can actually touch the standing stones.
Some of us create our own fantasy countries, or perhaps mailing authorities, or both. Mine is Ballynafae, an imaginary island country just west of Ireland.
And some mix fact and whimsy, as I did in my Kilmallock series, issued under my Ballynafae mailing authority.
This group of six stamps celebrates a real location – Kilmallock, Co. Limerick – using vintage photos from the mid-1990s… but I pretended that these were official stamps from Ballynafae.

The “Tapestry” stamps are from photos I took in 2001 at the final performance of Walt Disney World’s “Tapestry” parade at EPCOT. (See video link at the foot of this post. Also, the lower “Walt Disney World 2001” stamp features family friend Jeremy Pace, when he was part of the parade’s finale.)

Here’s another example of a single set of artistamps:

A little more info about artistamps…
Starting in the late 1990s, I was a member of the Electronic Collaboration Project (ECP), creating several artistamp series. And, in the Artists’ Mailing List (AML) group my issuing authority was AML-23.
And here’s more context for my Tapestry artistamp series
The following video shows EPCOT’s “Tapestry of Nations” parade, that inspired my artistamp series.