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Repository: Duke University Archives. Durham, North Carolina, USA. library.duke.edu/uarchives

taken with a roll of Natura 1600 bought circa 2005. should be expired > 5 years

These grotesque figurines are somewhat Eduardo Paolazzi in style, and have odd wee display cases mounted in them for prehistoric Scottish jewelled artefacts.

As of August, 2013, I had 58 salts, displayed in 4 curios cabinets. I found the first case, by chance, at an area flea market. I searched, diligently, afterward, &, finally, bought 2 new, smaller cases on the Internet, because I couldn't locate anything in my area. Those cases cost more than I would have liked, plus the $13 s & h on each! I found the last case at a flea market in Maine, displaying a vendor's trinket boxes. She had several cases & was willing, after discussion, to part with that one, for the right price. As of September, 2013, after my trip to Maine, I, now, own 3 more salts. Oh, my!

Even though we were already full, we still stepped into a fried chicken restaurant — and that’s when I first tasted what I can only describe as the food of the gods.

It was Yangnyeom Chicken (양념치킨) — crispy fried chicken coated in a sweet and spicy sauce, one of Korea’s most beloved dishes.

📍 We went to Cheogajip Yangnyeom Chicken (처갓집 양념치킨) — one of the most popular Korean fried chicken chains.

And by the way, this kind of chicken definitely exists in St. Petersburg too — and it’s actually surprisingly close to the original, personally confirmed!

🍗 Yangnyeom Chicken (양념치킨)

Crispy on the outside, juicy on the inside — the chicken is covered in a rich, sweet-and-spicy glaze made from gochujang, garlic, soy sauce, and sugar.

It’s usually served with:

– pickled radish (무, mu)

– cabbage salad with ketchup and mayo

– and sometimes with beer — that’s the iconic combo called chimaek (치맥) = chicken + maekju (beer) 🍗🍺

I probably couldn’t eat that much now 😅

But back then — we ate so well and happily went straight to bed again.

GWL Creations Desert City Diorama

you can order my dioramas from my Etsy shop

My Etsy shop

www.etsy.com/shop/GWLcreations

My Instagram

www.instagram.com/georgewump3.75

My Facebook page for Dioramas and Custom figures

www.facebook.com/GeorgeWump

My youtube channel

www.youtube.com/@g.w.l.creations

  

About me

I'm George. I'm a potter, sculptor and decorator and I have a pottery studio in Greece.

I'm also a Star Wars collector.

I love to display my 3.75″ and 6″ action figures and I love to make dioramas for myself and other people.

If you like my work you can check my Etsy shop and follow me on social media

#actionfigures #mandalorian #starwarsdiorama #starwarscollectors #starwarscollection #hottoys

#1/6scale #sixthscale

Student looking upon Cicero Osco Pilgrim's "The Last Days" in Bailey Library (underground), 1970

El zapato de caperucita.

 

Panasonic DMC-L1 + Leica D Summilux 25mm F1.4

Glengarry Pioneer Museum; Dunvegan, Ontario.

I tried to compensate for the poor lighting through windows at photoshop for you to be able to see the old telephone, typewriter and even a telegraph set in what was set up as a rail station manager's office.

Henry McAninch, one of our social studies teachers, let us borrow currency from his collection. He traveled extensively during and right after college and collected currency from many countries.

kyoto, japan

fall 1972

 

restaurant display case

(damaged negative)

 

part of an archival project, featuring the photographs of nick dewolf

 

© the Nick DeWolf Foundation

Image-use requests are welcome via flickrmail or nickdewolfphotoarchive [at] gmail [dot] com

Photographed on display at the Argus Museum located in the original Argus factory building, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

 

Oddly Argus did not change the STL 1000 model designation despite having parted ways with Cosina by this point, and this rebadged Petri FTX looking entirely different.

Walker Art Center Library Display Case, Spring 2008.

 

Leperello, designed by Rosemary Furtak, featuring accordian-style publications.

 

Leporello: A book folded in accordion form. It is named for Leporello, the servant of Don Juan in Mozart’s opera, Don Giovanni, who displays his master’s conquests in such a book.

 

Back row books by Scott McCarney, Karen Hanmer, Maurizio Nannucci, Chip Schilling, and Telfer Stokes and Helen Douglas.

 

Middle Row books by Alicia McKim, Rita MacDonald, Dylan Graham, and Elmar Heimbach.

 

Front Row books by Dorothy A. Yule, Esther Smith and Dikko Faust, JoAnna Poehlmann, Kiki Smith, and Christian Appel.

Sorry for the crummy pictures, but you can see here I have my art room painted and my display case mounted.

 

It is open here, and I plan on adding a wire and some hooks for jewelry.

Image 5" X 7", some of mount cropped out. August 1940 written on back and "Faust's" or "Traust's". The calendars are all dated August 1940 and come from businesses in Rudyard, Michigan. Purchased at an antique mall in Sauk City, Wisconsin.

i added lotsa books, rearranged some stuff, added picture frames.

What good would a display be without a holiday gnome??

Russian, Chinese, German, Indian and Japanese Shelf

Model of the below aircraft.

 

N-number : N736S

Aircraft Serial Number : 70105

Aircraft Manufacturer : STEFFEN ROBERT

Model : RV7A

Engine Manufacturer : LYCOMING

Model : I0360 SER

Aircraft Year : 2005

Type of Owner : Individual

Registration Date : 05-Aug-2002

Airworthiness Certificate Type : Experimental

Approved Operations : Amateur Built

 

Phone Picture

Seen here is a long line of many glass cases filled with origami paper cranes to honour a brave child Sadako Sasaki who developed leukemia as a result of the American atom bomb dropped in HIroshimand was making a paper crane every single day of her short life before she eventually succumbed. Notes about this appeared earlier in this album (see previous picture) and will also appear later in this album as a caption to a gut wrenching picture of Sadako Sasaki in her coffin. These glass cases are placed next to the Childrens' Peace Momument in the grounds of the Peace Memorial Park in Hiroshima, Japan, the site of America's atom bomb blast dating back to WW- II in 1945. (Hiroshima,Japan, Apr/ May 2019)

Kirk-Bear Canyon Library, by Eva Ortiz, Pima County Public Library

 

View at Artefact Festival, STUK, Leuven, february 2010.

 

The File Room is a temporary physical installation and a permanent, expandable database on the internet, with all the information referring to artistic or cultural censorship. Visitors can view the site and add censorship cases. The black-metal-cabinet-walls and the darkness in the space evoke associations with oppressive institutional memory and authority. This installation, like many other Muntadas projects, brings with it in its execution, evolution and maintenance a collective spirit that is open to a public and a social space of dialogue, discussion and successive contributions. The File Room does not presume the role of a library, an encyclopedia, or even a copyeditor, in the traditional sense. It claims no scholarly, editorial or scientific authority, but instead proposes alternative methods for information collection, processing and distribution, to stimulate dialogue and debate around issues of censorship and archiving. Censorship is a crude, blatant realisation of social restraints. Such repression when public, forced and obvious is censorship. When internal, automatic, and unconscious, it is ideology.

 

The File Room is now considered one of the classic early works created for the internet. Muntadas’s TVE: Primer Intento; was one of the first cases posted on the site, when the artist himself was confronted with censorship. Muntadas also described it as a reaction to the political and cultural controversies in the US around artists like Mapplethorpe and Serrano, in addition to the public debate about the internet and freedom of speech in the public domain. A significant aspect of the initial installation presented in Chicago was the visitor’s access to the internet at a time when a relatively small percentage of the US population was online.

 

Text source :

www.artefact-festival.be/programme/detail/57525

 

See also :

www.thefileroom.org/

www.thefileroom.org/documents/dyn/DisplayCase.cfm/id/411

The display with the transformation bowls contained this explanation of the students' objective in the project.

Vintage perfume bottle display at the scent museum in Kobe's Nunibiki herb garden.

"On the banks of the Euphrates find a secret garden cunningly walled. There is an entrance, but the entrance is guarded. There is no way in for you. Inside you will find every plant that grows growing circular-wise like a target. Close to the heart is a sundial and at the heart an orange tree. ... To eat of the fruit means to leave the garden because the fruit speaks of other things, other longings. So at dusk you say goodbye to the place you love, not knowing if you can ever return, knowing you can never return by the same way as this. It may be, some other day, that you will open a gate by chance, and find yourself again on the other side of the wall."

--Jeanette Winterson

 

Dedicated to my ol' friend Tomato.

 

UAE-visible copy

This is a tabletop charging station we designed and built for Minotaur Mazes in Seattle. It is designed to display handheld GPS units and charges them when not in use. The curved lid closes and locks to keep the GPS units secure.

Shells we've found in Florida, Bahamas, Jamaica, Western Mexico and Hawai'i.

Kirk-Bear Canyon Library, by Eva Ortiz, Pima County Public Library

 

Last night at Tea Drops in Westport, Kansas City, MO. Half the power in Westport went out and Tea Drops had to close up shop.

I visited the Evergreen State College Library on Wednesday, January 20th, to talk about Ask-WA with the librarians there.

 

I'm an alum, but don't get out to campus much, so it was nice to see some famliar sights (and plenty of change as well).

 

Photo taken by Ahniwa Ferrari.

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