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Photo taken May, 2018

 

Can anyone ID the Writers?

St. Pauli - Hamburg

Cut & Paste regional juried exhibition curated by Michael Asbill at the Muroff Cotler Galley at SUNY Ulster. What a fantastic collection of contemporary collage and assemblage pieces.

Schanzenviertel - Hamburg

Schanzenviertel - Hamburg

Looks yummy, I think, and it also smells good - like rice. But it tastes rather bland :-)

Schanzenviertel - Hamburg

Schanzenviertel - Hamburg

Photo from the exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), July 10 - December 1, 2013. The Slow House by Diller + Scofidio.

It smelt suspiciously like cat food. Not today’s posh varieties, which are destined for over-indulged feline child substitutes and look more like the first course in a seafront bistro than something to fill up a hungry moggy. Fish paste had the low-rent whiff of a more plebeian Tiddles' bowl. The colour was equally unappetising - an indeterminate shade somewhere between bandage pink and the ‘greige’ so beloved of interior decorators. The usually smooth texture was occasionally interrupted by a small fragment of bone, just to remind the eater that some time in the deep and murky past, one of the ingredients in this malodorous spread had swum free in the sea. Tiddles might have found the overall effect easy on the palate, but very few humans did.

 

Fish paste sometimes turned up as an emergency sandwich filling. After spending a morning sweating in a hot, hermetically sealed plastic box, wrapped in margarine, white bread and cling-film, these sandwiches were particularly pungent. Piled on a Ritz cracker, topped with a slice of cucumber, or gasp, a stuffed green olive, fish paste even gate-crashed the odd beetle drive or whist evening. But it was as welcome as a howling stray tom. Nine out of 10 people wouldn’t feed it to a cat.

 

Anna Burnside

  

 

Photo taken Sept. 2019 .

 

Can anyone ID the Artist?

Photo taken Sept. 2018

 

Is this by RIDER?

Made with homemade stamp.

After changing Dash's diaper, we accidently left behind a tube of butt paste. This guy found it before I realized I had dropped it. I just didn't have the heart to take it from him after he had smeared it all over his face.

 

- taken on Saturday June 5, 2008 on 5th Street in Atlanta, GA.

Pattern made with a tongue cleaner.

Karolinenviertel - Hamburg

Ottensen - Hamburg

Schanzenviertel - Hamburg

Schanzenviertel - Hamburg

Schanzenviertel - Hamburg

pasted in Berlin as part of the ArtFabric project

Karolinenviertel - Hamburg

Karolinenviertel - Hamburg

Altona - Hamburg

for a free paste up for your wall, hit that favourite button so i know your interested peace

Schanzenviertel - Hamburg

St. Pauli - Hamburg

Schanzenviertel - Hamburg

Cutting up years worth of saved art, photoshop, and 3D magazines. The plan is to cut out all the images I like and paste them in a notebook. Also, all interesting articles and tutorials, etc are going in a 3-ring binder for future reference. The rest will be thrown out.

Shots taken from an early morning stroll in the historic center of Valencia.

 

Valencia, Spain. It was founded by the Romans in 138 B.C. (though I'm surprised the Phoenicians weren't hanging out in the area before that; I'm guessing they probably were. The Carthaginians, too, for that matter...)

 

Valencia is the third largest city in Spain after Barcelona and Madrid with a population around 800,000 in the city proper.

 

When I first came here two years ago, I was very pleasantly surprised at how much I enjoyed the town.

 

It's similar to Barcelona in some respects (both speak Catalan before Castellano, and the architecture here reminds me quite a bit of L'Eixample in Barcelona...but without the square grid streets of that city.)

 

Valencia is compact enough that things are quite walkable (though a healthy walk) depending on where you stay. There's also a metro, though I've never used it here, so have no idea where it goes or how useful it is

 

Last time and this, I stayed close enough to downtown that I just walked everywhere.

 

The heart of the city is the Plaza del Ayuntamiento (City Hall). From there, about 200 meters south is the Estacio del Nord train station (built in 1917). next to the Plaza de Toros (1850-59). On the main square is quite a bit of rather modern (19th-20th century, anyway) architecture. Also on the main square (and this probably isn't a good thing if you're looking for authentic Spain), you can currently find the following eating establishments: Taco Bell, Burger King, Blue Frog, Five Guys, and within a 3 minute walk, Hard Rock Cafe and McDonald's. There are restaurants around where you can get Valencia's famous paella...don't worry about that.

 

Walking north from the square, you'll reach the not-so-modern cathedral in about 300-400 meters. That church was built between the 13th and 15th century. En route, with a slight detour of 200 meters, you'd run into Mercat Central, which has been around since the 1830s, with the current building standing since 1928.

 

If you were to keep walking beyond the cathedral in a straight line, you'd pass by the Plaza del Virgen with its nice fountain and eventually bump into the former riverbed of the Rio Turia.

 

It's a former riverbed because it once flooded, so they ended up diverting the river and it's now a wonderful park for running, exercise, relaxation, picnics, etc.

 

If you were to head east...ish in the park from due north of the cathedral, you'd immediately pass the Museum of Fine Arts, some nice bridges, Palace of Music, and plenty of green space before eventually arriving (about 3 km later) at the City of Arts and Sciences.

 

This is one of the highlights of visiting Spain if you ask me, just for the ultramodernity of it. It's a complex that consists of the Palau de les Arts (basically opera house), Hemisferic (not sure what its purpose is, but it's the next in line and looks like an eye from the side), science museum (supposed to resemble a whale's skeleton), a bridge, the Agora (concert venue; it's the one that sticks up like a blue fingernail) and, beyond that, Oceanografic -- which I didn't make it to last time or this one.

 

Besides those highlights, it's simply fun to wander around the streets near the cathedral and City Hall and get lost. You'll bump into plenty of bars and cafes (a bit Bohemian) on the west side of this area and more of a shopping area (cleaner/more sterile feel) on the east side of this area.

 

Valencia...it's the type of town I'll always enjoy.

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