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Specific Media/MySpace Holiday Bash 2011 | www.miminguyen.com

Specific Media/MySpace Holiday Bash 2011 | www.miminguyen.com

Riverbanks Zoo, Columbia, SC

Developing BlackBerry App "BugIt" using the current version of the BlackBerry DSL. So far, labels, buttons, images, and partial screens can be modeled.

 

Implementing an incremental development software process for the creation of the BlackBerry DSL.

Specific Media/MySpace Holiday Bash 2011 | www.miminguyen.com

(HGM 2012.3.1 M, Heisey Glass Museum, Newark, Ohio, USA)

-----------------------------------

"400 Colonial Scallop Top" is the designation for a specific glass product design made in Newark, Ohio by the Heisey Glass Company (1896 to 1957). Heisey glass designs are called "patterns". Pattern designations include a number (not necessarily consecutively numbered during the history of the glass factory) and a name. Some pattern names were given by the Heisey company, while others were given by Heisey glass researchers.

 

"Nappy" refers to a low glass bowl.

 

The source of silica for Heisey glass is apparently undocumented, but was possibly a sandstone deposit in the Glassrock area (Glenford & Chalfants area) of Perry County, Ohio (if anyone can provide verfication of this, please inform me). Quarries in the area targeted the Pennsylvanian-aged Massillon Sandstone (Pottsville Group) and processed it into glass sand suitable for glass making.

-----------------------------------

From museum signage:

 

Augustus H. Heisey (1842-1922) emigrated from Germany with his family in 1843. They settled in Merrittown, Pennsylvania and after graduation from the Merrittown Academy, he worked for a short time in the printing business.

 

In 1861, he began his life-long career in the glass industry by taking a job as a clerk with the King Glass Company of Pittsburgh. After a stint in the Union Army, Heisey joined the Ripley Glass Company as a salesman. It was there that he earned his reputation of "the best glass salesman on the road".

 

In 1870, Heisey married Susan Duncan, daughter of George Duncan, then part-owner of the Ripley Company and later full owner, at which time he changed its name to George Duncan & Sons. A year later, he deeded a quarter interest to each of his two children. A few years after his death, A.H. Heisey and James Duncan became sole owners. In 1891, the company joined the U.S. Glass Company to escape its financial difficulties. Heisey was the commercial manager.

 

Heisey began to formulate plans for his own glass company in 1893. He chose Newark, Ohio because there was an abundance of natural gas nearby and, due to the efforts of the Newark Board of Trade, there was plenty of low cost labor available. Construction of the factory at 301 Oakwood Avenue began in 1895 and it opened in April of 1896 with one sixteen-pot furnace. In its heyday, the factory had three furnaces and employed nearly seven hundred people. There was a great demand for the fine glass and Heisey sold it all over the world.

 

The production in the early years was confined to pressed ware, in the style of imitation cut glass. The company also dealt extensively with hotel barware. By the late 1890s, Heisey revived the colonial patterns with flutes, scallops, and panels which had been so popular decades earlier. These were so well accepted that from that time on, at least one colonial line was made continuously until the factory closed.

 

A.H. Heisey's name appears on many different design patents including some when he was with George Duncan & Sons. Heisey patterns that he was named the designer include 1225 Plain Band, 305 Punty and Diamond Point, and 1776 Kalonyal.

 

Other innovations instituted by A.H. Heisey were the pioneering in advertising glassware in magazines nationally, starting as early as 1910 and the first glass company to make fancy pressed stems. That idea caught on quickly and most hand-wrought stemware is made in this manner, even now.

-----------------------------------

Info. at:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heisey_Glass_Company

and

heiseymuseum.org

 

(HGM 2022.25.11, Heisey Glass Museum, Newark, Ohio, USA)

-----------------------------------

"3366 Trojan" is the designation for a specific glass product design made in Newark, Ohio by the Heisey Glass Company (1896 to 1957). Heisey glass designs are called "patterns". Pattern designations include a number (not necessarily consecutively numbered during the history of the glass factory) and a name. Some pattern names were given by the Heisey company, while others were given by Heisey glass researchers.

 

The source of silica for Heisey glass is apparently undocumented, but was possibly a sandstone deposit in the Glassrock area (Glenford & Chalfants area) of Perry County, Ohio (if anyone can provide verfication of this, please inform me). Quarries in the area targeted the Pennsylvanian-aged Massillon Sandstone (Pottsville Group) and processed it into glass sand suitable for glass making.

-----------------------------------

From Bredehoft (2004):

 

Hawthorne: 1927 only. Replaced by Alexandrite. A light purple or lavender shade. Varies quite a lot in tone. Apparently the company had trouble controlling the color, possibly due to their inability to control the flamingo color base.

-----------------------------------

From museum signage:

 

Augustus H. Heisey (1842-1922) emigrated from Germany with his family in 1843. They settled in Merrittown, Pennsylvania and after graduation from the Merrittown Academy, he worked for a short time in the printing business.

 

In 1861, he began his life-long career in the glass industry by taking a job as a clerk with the King Glass Company of Pittsburgh. After a stint in the Union Army, Heisey joined the Ripley Glass Company as a salesman. It was there that he earned his reputation of "the best glass salesman on the road".

 

In 1870, Heisey married Susan Duncan, daughter of George Duncan, then part-owner of the Ripley Company and later full owner, at which time he changed its name to George Duncan & Sons. A year later, he deeded a quarter interest to each of his two children. A few years after his death, A.H. Heisey and James Duncan became sole owners. In 1891, the company joined the U.S. Glass Company to escape its financial difficulties. Heisey was the commercial manager.

 

Heisey began to formulate plans for his own glass company in 1893. He chose Newark, Ohio because there was an abundance of natural gas nearby and, due to the efforts of the Newark Board of Trade, there was plenty of low cost labor available. Construction of the factory at 301 Oakwood Avenue began in 1895 and it opened in April of 1896 with one sixteen-pot furnace. In its heyday, the factory had three furnaces and employed nearly seven hundred people. There was a great demand for the fine glass and Heisey sold it all over the world.

 

The production in the early years was confined to pressed ware, in the style of imitation cut glass. The company also dealt extensively with hotel barware. By the late 1890s, Heisey revived the colonial patterns with flutes, scallops, and panels which had been so popular decades earlier. These were so well accepted that from that time on, at least one colonial line was made continuously until the factory closed.

 

A.H. Heisey's name appears on many different design patents including some when he was with George Duncan & Sons. Heisey patterns that he was named the designer include 1225 Plain Band, 305 Punty and Diamond Point, and 1776 Kalonyal.

 

Other innovations instituted by A.H. Heisey were the pioneering in advertising glassware in magazines nationally, starting as early as 1910 and the first glass company to make fancy pressed stems. That idea caught on quickly and most hand-wrought stemware is made in this manner, even now.

-----------------------------------

Reference cited:

 

Bredehoft, N. (ed.) (2004) - Heisey glass formulas - and more, from the papers of Emmet E. Olson, Heisey chemist. The West Virginia Museum of American Glass. Ltd.'s Monograph 38.

-----------------------------------

Info. at:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heisey_Glass_Company

and

heiseymuseum.org

and

heiseymuseum.org/gallery/heisey-hawthorne/

 

Specific Media/MySpace Holiday Bash 2011 | www.miminguyen.com

Aus der Serie „Sommerfrische“. 2015

Site-specific Performance und Intervention

Italien - Kanaltal

Performance, Fotografie und Installation

Performance: Andrea Nagl & Markus Wintersberger

Fotografie: Andrea Nagl & Markus Wintersberger

Nagl ~ Wintersberger 2015

20. - 22. September 2013

Jesuit College, Jicin.

Starting workshop of continuous program was focus on a source of light and the lighting source in Site-specific space.

'ascension' is a site-specific installation by anish kapoor, presented as a collateral event of the venice art bienniale 2011.

exploring the transience of smoke, the work creates a tangible, rising column of the traditionally immaterial substance.

previously exhibited in gallery spaces in san giminiano (italy), in sao paolo and rio de janiero (brazil), and in beijing (china),

the work takes on new meaning in the spiritual context of venice's basilica di san giorgio.

 

'in my work, what is and what seems to be often become blurred. in ascension, for example, what interests me is the idea of immateriality

becoming an object, which is exactly what happens in ascension: the smoke becomes a column. also present in this work is the idea

of moses following a column of smoke, a column of light, in the desert...'

anish kapoor"

Designboom

'ascension' is a site-specific installation by anish kapoor, presented as a collateral event of the venice art bienniale 2011.

exploring the transience of smoke, the work creates a tangible, rising column of the traditionally immaterial substance.

previously exhibited in gallery spaces in san giminiano (italy), in sao paolo and rio de janiero (brazil), and in beijing (china),

the work takes on new meaning in the spiritual context of venice's basilica di san giorgio.

 

'in my work, what is and what seems to be often become blurred. in ascension, for example, what interests me is the idea of immateriality

becoming an object, which is exactly what happens in ascension: the smoke becomes a column. also present in this work is the idea

of moses following a column of smoke, a column of light, in the desert...'

anish kapoor

Aus der Serie „Denudation“.

Site-specific Performance und Intervention

Hohe Tauern, Großvenediger August 2014

Video, Fotografie und Installation

Performance: Andrea Nagl & Markus Wintersberger

Fotografie / Video: Andrea Nagl & Markus Wintersberger

Nagl ~ Wintersberger 2014 / 2015

(HGM 5967 M, Heisey Glass Museum, Newark, Ohio, USA)

-----------------------------------

"4085 Kohinoor" is the designation for a specific glass product design made in Newark, Ohio by the Heisey Glass Company (1896 to 1957). Heisey glass designs are called "patterns". Pattern designations include a number (not necessarily consecutively numbered during the history of the glass factory) and a name. Some pattern names were given by the Heisey company, while others were given by Heisey glass researchers.

 

"Zircon" refers to a type of colored glass that Heisey made - in this case, greenish.

 

The source of silica for Heisey glass is apparently undocumented, but was possibly a sandstone deposit in the Glassrock area (Glenford & Chalfants area) of Perry County, Ohio (if anyone can provide verfication of this, please inform me). Quarries in the area targeted the Pennsylvanian-aged Massillon Sandstone (Pottsville Group) and processed it into glass sand suitable for glass making.

-----------------------------------

From Bredehoft (2004):

 

Zircon: 1936-1939. A turquoise blue-green. The last color introduced before World War II curtailed the use of color. Revamped and reintroduced later as Limelight.

-----------------------------------

From museum signage:

 

Augustus H. Heisey (1842-1922) emigrated from Germany with his family in 1843. They settled in Merrittown, Pennsylvania and after graduation from the Merrittown Academy, he worked for a short time in the printing business.

 

In 1861, he began his life-long career in the glass industry by taking a job as a clerk with the King Glass Company of Pittsburgh. After a stint in the Union Army, Heisey joined the Ripley Glass Company as a salesman. It was there that he earned his reputation of "the best glass salesman on the road".

 

In 1870, Heisey married Susan Duncan, daughter of George Duncan, then part-owner of the Ripley Company and later full owner, at which time he changed its name to George Duncan & Sons. A year later, he deeded a quarter interest to each of his two children. A few years after his death, A.H. Heisey and James Duncan became sole owners. In 1891, the company joined the U.S. Glass Company to escape its financial difficulties. Heisey was the commercial manager.

 

Heisey began to formulate plans for his own glass company in 1893. He chose Newark, Ohio because there was an abundance of natural gas nearby and, due to the efforts of the Newark Board of Trade, there was plenty of low cost labor available. Construction of the factory at 301 Oakwood Avenue began in 1895 and it opened in April of 1896 with one sixteen-pot furnace. In its heyday, the factory had three furnaces and employed nearly seven hundred people. There was a great demand for the fine glass and Heisey sold it all over the world.

 

The production in the early years was confined to pressed ware, in the style of imitation cut glass. The company also dealt extensively with hotel barware. By the late 1890s, Heisey revived the colonial patterns with flutes, scallops, and panels which had been so popular decades earlier. These were so well accepted that from that time on, at least one colonial line was made continuously until the factory closed.

 

A.H. Heisey's name appears on many different design patents including some when he was with George Duncan & Sons. Heisey patterns that he was named the designer include 1225 Plain Band, 305 Punty and Diamond Point, and 1776 Kalonyal.

 

Other innovations instituted by A.H. Heisey were the pioneering in advertising glassware in magazines nationally, starting as early as 1910 and the first glass company to make fancy pressed stems. That idea caught on quickly and most hand-wrought stemware is made in this manner, even now.

-----------------------------------

Reference cited:

 

Bredehoft, N. (ed.) (2004) - Heisey glass formulas - and more, from the papers of Emmet E. Olson, Heisey chemist. The West Virginia Museum of American Glass. Ltd.'s Monograph 38.

-----------------------------------

Info. at:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heisey_Glass_Company

and

heiseymuseum.org

and

heiseymuseum.org/gallery/heisey-zircon-limelight/

 

On September 24th, 2024, EM hosted its SSAB Chairs meeting and gave members a tour of various sites across the Oak Ridge reservation.

20. - 22. September 2013

Jesuit College, Jicin.

Starting workshop of continuous program was focus on a source of light and the lighting source in Site-specific space.

To Share a Photo on Social Media:

1. Click on the set you would like to browse

2. Click on a specific photo

3. Click on the arrow pointing right on the ride lower side of the screen

4. Click on the Facebook icon in the popup window

4. Follow instructions in pop-up window

 

To Download a Photo:

1. Click on the set you would like to see (Awards, Pre/Post Race, Finish, etc.)

2. Click on a specific photo from the set

3. Click the arrow pointing down towards the bar which is on the right side of the screen.

4. Click the photo sizes you would like and then click download.

youtube.com/graffaholiczanonymous

facebook.com/graffaholiczanonymous

flickr.com/graffaholiczanonymous

Photographic techniques capture electromagnetic wavelengths beyond human vision, revealing features invisible to the naked eye. These signals are processed into interpretable forms using methods like color mapping.

 

Pink lacks a specific electromagnetic wavelength, while grey poses a limitation due to its representation of only intensity—a blend of light and dark without spectral specificity. Imaging techniques reliant on spectral variation produce identical results for greyscale images unless non-visible data is present. Deviations from this uniformity may indicate errors, misinterpretations, or unknown phenomena.

 

Contention persists over analytical debates, including dismissible claims like Van Allen belt dangers and contested evidence of lunar mirrors. The precision of laser reflections targeting a moving 3x3-foot marker on the Moon highlights technical skill but often fails to resolve skepticism. For instance, a 0.1° shift moves a laser spot 670 km across the Moon's surface.

 

Forensic analysis (2022, 2023) of Apollo 11–17 photographs assessed authenticity claims. Images of humans in space, Earth, and the Moon's distant views were validated, but Moon landing visuals showed variations, suggesting diverse techniques may have replicated certain elements.

 

PEMi (Photoelectromagnetic Image) software enhances forensic analysis by differentiating natural and artificial light sources, revealing hidden features. Each PEMi-ID links to original sources, ensuring traceability and comparison.

 

Further exploration is available:

Lehti, A. (2024). The Silence of Inquiry: Forensic Reflections Reveal a Crisis of Perception. figshare. doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.28078982

 

Credits

2022-2025 © Andrew Lehti

1961–2023 © NASA, ESA

Software: PEMi (GitHub: andylehti/PEMi.git)

Explore PEM-I: pemimage.streamlit.app

CC BY-SA 4.0 License: creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/

 

Research:

Lehti, Andrew (2024). Cognitive Psychology and the Education System. figshare. Collection. doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.7532079

 

CC BY-SA 4.0

This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, PO Box 1866, Mountain View, CA 94042, USA.

(HGM 4949 L 266, Heisey Glass Museum, Newark, Ohio, USA)

-----------------------------------

"1405 Ipswich" is the designation for a specific glass product design made in Newark, Ohio by the Heisey Glass Company (1896 to 1957). Heisey glass designs are called "patterns". Pattern designations include a number (not necessarily consecutively numbered during the history of the glass factory) and a name. Some pattern names were given by the Heisey company, while others were given by Heisey glass researchers.

 

"Moongleam" refers to a type of colored glass that Heisey produced - in this case, light green.

 

The source of silica for Heisey glass is apparently undocumented, but was possibly a sandstone deposit in the Glassrock area (Glenford & Chalfants area) of Perry County, Ohio (if anyone can provide verfication of this, please inform me). Quarries in the area targeted the Pennsylvanian-aged Massillon Sandstone (Pottsville Group) and processed it into glass sand suitable for glass making.

-----------------------------------

From museum signage:

 

Augustus H. Heisey (1842-1922) emigrated from Germany with his family in 1843. They settled in Merrittown, Pennsylvania and after graduation from the Merrittown Academy, he worked for a short time in the printing business.

 

In 1861, he began his life-long career in the glass industry by taking a job as a clerk with the King Glass Company of Pittsburgh. After a stint in the Union Army, Heisey joined the Ripley Glass Company as a salesman. It was there that he earned his reputation of "the best glass salesman on the road".

 

In 1870, Heisey married Susan Duncan, daughter of George Duncan, then part-owner of the Ripley Company and later full owner, at which time he changed its name to George Duncan & Sons. A year later, he deeded a quarter interest to each of his two children. A few years after his death, A.H. Heisey and James Duncan became sole owners. In 1891, the company joined the U.S. Glass Company to escape its financial difficulties. Heisey was the commercial manager.

 

Heisey began to formulate plans for his own glass company in 1893. He chose Newark, Ohio because there was an abundance of natural gas nearby and, due to the efforts of the Newark Board of Trade, there was plenty of low cost labor available. Construction of the factory at 301 Oakwood Avenue began in 1895 and it opened in April of 1896 with one sixteen-pot furnace. In its heyday, the factory had three furnaces and employed nearly seven hundred people. There was a great demand for the fine glass and Heisey sold it all over the world.

 

The production in the early years was confined to pressed ware, in the style of imitation cut glass. The company also dealt extensively with hotel barware. By the late 1890s, Heisey revived the colonial patterns with flutes, scallops, and panels which had been so popular decades earlier. These were so well accepted that from that time on, at least one colonial line was made continuously until the factory closed.

 

A.H. Heisey's name appears on many different design patents including some when he was with George Duncan & Sons. Heisey patterns that he was named the designer include 1225 Plain Band, 305 Punty and Diamond Point, and 1776 Kalonyal.

 

Other innovations instituted by A.H. Heisey were the pioneering in advertising glassware in magazines nationally, starting as early as 1910 and the first glass company to make fancy pressed stems. That idea caught on quickly and most hand-wrought stemware is made in this manner, even now.

-----------------------------------

Info. at:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heisey_Glass_Company

and

heiseymuseum.org

and

heiseymuseum.org/gallery/heisey-moongleam/

 

Sol LeWitt, Wall Drawing #146, September 1972. Blue crayon, Site- specific dimensions

Model Specific: MAX-9 Pro

Chamber Length: 0 in.

Frame Finish: Black

Front Sight: Tritium Fiber Optic

Rear Sight: Drift Adjustable

Grips: High Performance Nylon

Features: Reversible Magazine Release E-Nickel Teflon Coated Mags External Manual Safety Lever

 

Finish: Black, Blue

Number of Magazines: 2

Firing System: Striker

Slide Description: Black Oxide

Frame Material: Glass Filled Nylon

Barrel Configuration: Single

Rifled Barrel: Yes

Forend Rail: Picatinny Rail

Minimum Pull Length: 0 in.

 

www.kingfishersportinggoods.com/product/ruger-max-9-optic...

Capitolo primo. L’astratta qualità del ricordo. (2016/2017).

Installazione site specific al Museo Civico Villa dei Cedri per la mostra "In(de)finiti luoghi".

Ticino, Svizzera.

 

Chapter one. The abstract quality of remembrance. (2016/2017)

Site specific installation at Villa dei Cedri Museum for the exhibition "In(de)finiti luoghi".

Ticino, Swizterland.

2019-07-26: (L-R) Teresa Ribeiro, Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs and Cooperation of Portugal; H.E. Geraldo Martins, Minister of Economy and Finance of Guinea-Bissauand, AfDB Governor and Serge N’Guessan, AfDB Deputy Director General for the region with the documents during the Guinea-Bissau Country Specific Compact Signing Ceremony.

Specific Media/MySpace Holiday Bash 2011 | www.miminguyen.com

Specific Media/MySpace Holiday Bash 2011 | www.miminguyen.com

Aus der Serie In the Silence

Site specific Improvisation/Intervention mit Ast im Rahmen des Brus day,

6.7.2021 Wiener Heldenplatz.

Fotos: Markus Wintersberger

Specific Design Element Assessment

-Trees, bushes and shrubs are placed around the space to provide visual interest and a connection to nature

  

Relevant Land Use Code Sections

20.25A.160.D.4.h - Provide landscaping to define and animate the space wherever possible

20.25A.160.D.4.i - Incorporate trees and landscaping to provide enclosure and soften the experience of the built environment

 

Capitolo primo. L’astratta qualità del ricordo. (2016/2017).

Installazione site specific al Museo Civico Villa dei Cedri per la mostra "In(de)finiti luoghi".

Ticino, Svizzera.

 

Chapter one. The abstract quality of remembrance. (2016/2017)

Site specific installation at Villa dei Cedri Museum for the exhibition "In(de)finiti luoghi".

Ticino, Swizterland.

(HGM 965 M, Heisey Glass Museum, Newark, Ohio, USA)

-----------------------------------

"1413 Cathedral" is the designation for a specific glass product design made in Newark, Ohio by the Heisey Glass Company (1896 to 1957). Heisey glass designs are called "patterns". Pattern designations include a number (not necessarily consecutively numbered during the history of the glass factory) and a name. Some pattern names were given by the Heisey company, while others were given by Heisey glass researchers.

 

"Cobalt" refers to a type of colored glass that Heisey produced. It is also known as "Stiegel Blue".

 

The source of silica for Heisey glass is apparently undocumented, but was possibly a sandstone deposit in the Glassrock area (Glenford & Chalfants area) of Perry County, Ohio (if anyone can provide verfication of this, please inform me). Quarries in the area targeted the Pennsylvanian-aged Massillon Sandstone (Pottsville Group) and processed it into glass sand suitable for glass making.

-----------------------------------

From Bredehoft (2004):

 

Stiegel Blue: 1932-1941. Commonly called cobalt blue. Heisey's has exceptionally good color.

-----------------------------------

From museum signage:

 

Augustus H. Heisey (1842-1922) emigrated from Germany with his family in 1843. They settled in Merrittown, Pennsylvania and after graduation from the Merrittown Academy, he worked for a short time in the printing business.

 

In 1861, he began his life-long career in the glass industry by taking a job as a clerk with the King Glass Company of Pittsburgh. After a stint in the Union Army, Heisey joined the Ripley Glass Company as a salesman. It was there that he earned his reputation of "the best glass salesman on the road".

 

In 1870, Heisey married Susan Duncan, daughter of George Duncan, then part-owner of the Ripley Company and later full owner, at which time he changed its name to George Duncan & Sons. A year later, he deeded a quarter interest to each of his two children. A few years after his death, A.H. Heisey and James Duncan became sole owners. In 1891, the company joined the U.S. Glass Company to escape its financial difficulties. Heisey was the commercial manager.

 

Heisey began to formulate plans for his own glass company in 1893. He chose Newark, Ohio because there was an abundance of natural gas nearby and, due to the efforts of the Newark Board of Trade, there was plenty of low cost labor available. Construction of the factory at 301 Oakwood Avenue began in 1895 and it opened in April of 1896 with one sixteen-pot furnace. In its heyday, the factory had three furnaces and employed nearly seven hundred people. There was a great demand for the fine glass and Heisey sold it all over the world.

 

The production in the early years was confined to pressed ware, in the style of imitation cut glass. The company also dealt extensively with hotel barware. By the late 1890s, Heisey revived the colonial patterns with flutes, scallops, and panels which had been so popular decades earlier. These were so well accepted that from that time on, at least one colonial line was made continuously until the factory closed.

 

A.H. Heisey's name appears on many different design patents including some when he was with George Duncan & Sons. Heisey patterns that he was named the designer include 1225 Plain Band, 305 Punty and Diamond Point, and 1776 Kalonyal.

 

Other innovations instituted by A.H. Heisey were the pioneering in advertising glassware in magazines nationally, starting as early as 1910 and the first glass company to make fancy pressed stems. That idea caught on quickly and most hand-wrought stemware is made in this manner, even now.

-----------------------------------

Reference cited:

 

Bredehoft, N. (ed.) (2004) - Heisey glass formulas - and more, from the papers of Emmet E. Olson, Heisey chemist. The West Virginia Museum of American Glass. Ltd.'s Monograph 38.

-----------------------------------

Info. at:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heisey_Glass_Company

and

heiseymuseum.org

and

heiseymuseum.org/gallery/heisey-cobalt/

 

Specific Media/MySpace Holiday Bash 2011 | www.miminguyen.com

July 24th, 25th, 26th 2009 - Indietracks, an indiepop festival - Midland Railway Butterley, Swanwick Junction

Specific Media/MySpace Holiday Bash 2011 | www.miminguyen.com

dSatellite is a site-specific architectural structure that extends the mission of DFLUX (www.dflux.org), a Detroit-based research studio and residency program, further into its community. DFLUX engages its local neighborhood and the general public with creative actions, research, and workshops. In so doing, they hope to reveal and create emergent and sustainable cottage industries. dSatellite was created with the intention of providing future DFLUX participants and local residents with an outpost to engage in various field research. Constructed with foraged building materials, dSatellite merges both the physical and conceptual characteristics of the DFLUX Residency site and a typical nature blind used by naturalists, scientists, photographers and hunters. dSatellite is currently deployed in a completely razed residential neighborhood of Detroit currently referred to as the "field" by local residents and "Renaissance Zone" by real estate developers. A dense urban forest, rich with wildlife, has grown there, only crumbling roads and alleys, debris piles, and public utilities remain as signs of past use.

 

dSatellite was created during a research residency at DFLUX in Detroit, MI in collaboration with Joseph G. Cruz (http://josephgcruz.com)

Specific Media/MySpace Holiday Bash 2011 | www.miminguyen.com

These phrases are exclusive to the coffee world, just as many words are exclusive to math.

To Share a Photo on Social Media:

1. Click on the set you would like to browse

2. Click on a specific photo

3. Click on the arrow pointing right on the ride lower side of the screen

4. Click on the Facebook icon in the popup window

4. Follow instructions in pop-up window

 

To Download a Photo:

1. Click on the set you would like to see (Awards, Pre/Post Race, Finish, etc.)

2. Click on a specific photo from the set

3. Click the arrow pointing down towards the bar which is on the right side of the screen.

4. Click the photo sizes you would like and then click download.

To illustrate a method to crop a photo at a specific size

Site-specific installation by Gerri Sayler

University of Wyoming Art Museum

June — Dec 2012

www.gerrisayler.com

Capitolo primo. L’astratta qualità del ricordo. (2016/2017) Chapter one. The abstract quality of remembrance. (2016/2017)

Site specific installation. Work in progress.

1 2 ••• 69 70 72 74 75 ••• 79 80