The Baseball Photographer Trading Cards, 1975

kottke.org September 03, 2025 By Jason Kottke

the front and back of a black and white trading card featuring Ansel Adams dressed as a baseball player

the front and back of a black and white trading card featuring Imogen Cunningham dressed as a baseball player

the front and back of a black and white trading card featuring Bill Eggleston dressed as a baseball player

the front and back of a black and white trading card featuring Joyce Neimanas dressed as a baseball player

In the mid-70s, Mike Mandel traveled around the United States photographing photographers as if they were baseball players, capturing the likes of Imogen Cunningham, Ed Ruscha, William Eggleston, and Ansel Adams.

I photographed photographers as if they were baseball players and produced a set of cards that were packaged in random groups of ten, with bubble gum, so that the only way of collecting a complete set was to make a trade. I travelled around the United States visiting about 150 photographic “personalities” and had them pose for me. I carried baseball paraphernalia: caps, gloves, balls, a mask and chest protector, a bat, as well as photographic equipment, and made a 14,000 mile odyssey. Out of this experience came 134 Baseball-Photographer images. I designed a reverse side for the card which would allow for each photographer to fill in their own personal data that in a way referred to the information usually included on real baseball cards: Favorite camera, favorite developer, favorite film, height, weight, etc. I used whatever information each photographer provided me.

You can hear Mandel talking about the project in this SFMOMA video — the gum he included in the packages of cards was donated by Topps:

You can find some of the cards on eBay for around $10-50 apiece and a complete set, signed by Mandel & Imogen Cunningham, can be had for $3,650. (thx, duncan)

Tags: art · Mike Mandel · photography · remix · sports

💬 Join the discussion on kottke.org

the front and back of a black and white trading card featuring Ansel Adams dressed as a baseball player

the front and back of a black and white trading card featuring Imogen Cunningham dressed as a baseball player

the front and back of a black and white trading card featuring Bill Eggleston dressed as a baseball player

the front and back of a black and white trading card featuring Joyce Neimanas dressed as a baseball player

In the mid-70s, Mike Mandel traveled around the United States photographing photographers as if they were baseball players, capturing the likes of Imogen Cunningham, Ed Ruscha, William Eggleston, and Ansel Adams.

I photographed photographers as if they were baseball players and produced a set of cards that were packaged in random groups of ten, with bubble gum, so that the only way of collecting a complete set was to make a trade. I travelled around the United States visiting about 150 photographic “personalities” and had them pose for me. I carried baseball paraphernalia: caps, gloves, balls, a mask and chest protector, a bat, as well as photographic equipment, and made a 14,000 mile odyssey. Out of this experience came 134 Baseball-Photographer images. I designed a reverse side for the card which would allow for each photographer to fill in their own personal data that in a way referred to the information usually included on real baseball cards: Favorite camera, favorite developer, favorite film, height, weight, etc. I used whatever information each photographer provided me.

You can hear Mandel talking about the project in this SFMOMA video — the gum he included in the packages of cards was donated by Topps:

You can find some of the cards on eBay for around $10-50 apiece and a complete set, signed by Mandel & Imogen Cunningham, can be had for $3,650. (thx, duncan)

Tags: art · Mike Mandel · photography · remix · sports

💬 Join the discussion on kottke.org

Comments 0

Log in to post a comment.

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!

Source Information
kottke.org
Web Publication

Published on September 03, 2025 by Jason Kottke

Visit Original Article
Advertise with Us

Reach our audience with your ads