Monday, July 23, 2012
Friday, July 20, 2012
The sweet smell of tobacco
Labels:
1930s,
amateur art,
drawing,
Florida,
folk art,
food,
naive,
outsider art,
self-taught art,
tobacco
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Styrofoam giant
If this 20-foot fella at the top looks familiar you probably saw Zombieland, the 2009 film in which a shy student attempting to reach his family in Ohio, a gun-toting tough guy trying to find the "last Twinkie," and sisters seeking an amusement park join forces to travel across a zombie-filled America. Zombieland stars Woody Harrelson, Jesse Eisenberg and Emma Stone. The towering American Indian was created by Jay Womer Productions, which has a warehouse in intown Atlanta near my home. In the film, the Indian was a wood trading post figure in the Southwest. In real life, he's simply styrofoam and tubing in the Southeast. But even off screen the weathered giant impresses. Womer, who's shown in the second photo, said someone who coveted the foam Indian asked if it could be floated on the Chattahoochee River to his home. That idea was rejected. In Womer's business, crazy requests are not uncommon. The craftsmen under his direction recently completed a green screen for the upcoming Jackie Robinson biopic "42" that was 900 feet long, 80 feet tall and took six weeks to build. "The largest green screen in the world," Womer said. The screen was used to create the illusion of the Brooklyn Dodgers' stadium. The last photo shows a styrofoam head with a gaping wound overlooking Womer's workshop. Victim of a celluloid ax murderer?
Sunday, July 15, 2012
400 IKEA chairs
"Seat" is a big, arching sculpture in a park near my home in Atlanta. Yong Ju Lee and Brian Brush, partners in the New York-based design collaboration E/B Office, created Seat. Using 400 IKEA chairs, Lee and Brush demonstrate that even the simplest arse holders can delight when removed from their familiar domestic setting. flux projects, which organizes temporary outdoor art installations in Atlanta, presented Seat. A Kickstarter campaign raised $3,125 to help fund the installation.
Labels:
Atlanta,
chairs,
furniture,
ikea,
outdoor art,
public art,
recycle,
sculpture
Saturday, July 14, 2012
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Swarm
Labels:
amateur photography,
black and white,
odd,
photography,
snapshot,
strange,
unusual,
vintage
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
C Butler
Saturday, July 7, 2012
Blocky old dart board
Labels:
1900,
antique,
dart board,
darts,
folk art,
game board,
New York,
northeast,
recreation
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Deerskin postcard
Leather postcards were common up to 1909 when they were banned by the Postal Service. The great majority of them are Hallmark hokey. This card is only moderately hokey and the folky image is appealing. The date appears to be Aug. 2, 1906. It was mailed at 11 a.m. from Gardiner, N.Y. (just west of Poughkeepsie), to Derby, Conn., 77 miles to the east.
Monday, July 2, 2012
Southern cabinet
Brunk Auctions is selling this furniture on July 14. It is described as a "Southern folk art paint-decorated cabinet, probably Tennessee or North Carolina, second half 19th century, walnut and poplar in original dry varnished surface, cut nail and pinned construction, lower panel doors with carved and heart-pierced appliques, original porcelain pulls, 78-1/2 x 45 x 17-1/2 in." I'd like to add that it's very pretty.
Labels:
19th century,
antique,
appalachia,
cabinet,
folk art,
furniture,
handmade,
North Carolina,
rural,
Southern,
tennessee
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