I came to the computer just now to find a bloggift (did i just coin something or am i way behind?) from my good Richmond friend Brian Thibodeau: a new header for "one million paintings"!
brianthibodeau.com
thanks Brian!
Sunday, September 28
Wednesday, September 24
one million reasons to keep returning to MoMA with friends
remember these?
And now for the new ones.
Meet Leslie visiting from L.A.
The first attempt, obviously way too cute, was retried:
some improvement, but still way too cute.
Leslie's fiancee, Keith, also had issues overcoming his natural good looks and cheer
sorry Keith, even with the visual aids, still too handsome.
This is how ugly is done:
And now for the new ones.
Meet Leslie visiting from L.A.
The first attempt, obviously way too cute, was retried:
some improvement, but still way too cute.
Leslie's fiancee, Keith, also had issues overcoming his natural good looks and cheer
sorry Keith, even with the visual aids, still too handsome.
This is how ugly is done:
one million gold mines of colorado springs
Don't let the rugged Colorado Springs hills and our concerned looks under this title mislead you to conclude that Chris Lynn and I are about to descend into a dangerously unstable mine in a rickety roller coaster from the nineteenth century in search for treasures untold.
This is the scary mine
and refrigerators were my gold strike
An obsolete building that used to produce satellites and now housing obsolete equipment and furniture of the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs was the goldmine that brought me this:
and made me want to mine this:
Roy helped me collect a truckfull and haul it into the gallery
But the first goldmine was a Styrofoam factory around the corner from my hotel.
They even lent me an official school minivan to stuff.
My concern over finding and transporting enough Styrofoam was transformed into glee.
The gallery storage held a goldmine of sculpture plinths.
which were perfect for a Mondrian Bild.
For the afterparty Colorado Springs showed us a goldmine of western fun.
That's the group x-plo on the left, an artist group also in the show.
you can probably tell from our countenances that Chris proved himself the better pooler.
p.s. colorado is also a goldmine of the art of our fellow undergrad alumn: sculptor Mike Whiting
This is the scary mine
and refrigerators were my gold strike
An obsolete building that used to produce satellites and now housing obsolete equipment and furniture of the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs was the goldmine that brought me this:
and made me want to mine this:
Roy helped me collect a truckfull and haul it into the gallery
But the first goldmine was a Styrofoam factory around the corner from my hotel.
They even lent me an official school minivan to stuff.
My concern over finding and transporting enough Styrofoam was transformed into glee.
The gallery storage held a goldmine of sculpture plinths.
which were perfect for a Mondrian Bild.
For the afterparty Colorado Springs showed us a goldmine of western fun.
That's the group x-plo on the left, an artist group also in the show.
you can probably tell from our countenances that Chris proved himself the better pooler.
p.s. colorado is also a goldmine of the art of our fellow undergrad alumn: sculptor Mike Whiting
Thursday, September 11
one million plinths and fridges and Styrofoams
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