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This was taken in NW 23rd between two storefront windows. There was hardly graffiti on the street so this funny little face stuck out to me a lot!
Third Thursday: A Royal Affair
GOT IN FREE to The Habsburgs: Rarely Seen Masterpieces from Europe’s Greatest Dynasty.
TOOK a royal portrait in the photobooth.
DANCED like an emperor and learned some Viennese Waltz steps.
MADE a modern-day coat of arms.
DISCOVERED which Habsburg we were.
BROKE OUT the royal beats with Dosh.
Jack White meeting kids in front of Third Man Records on opening day, 4/18/09. (that's me on the right, trying to get the little one to turn around!)
early 1990s
Rolleiflex 3.5f Planar
Kodak VPS wet mount scan with Epson V750 and Silverfast 8
Post in Photoshop CS6 & RawTherapee
Third Thursday: Home is Where Havana is, held September 15, 2016 at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, MO. Photographer / Lauren Frisch Pusateri
March 10, 2009
Here's a shot from a family/senior session I shot today. It's the only photo I had the energy to process, so the rest are all waiting for me to start on tomorrow. LOL Right now, this girl is going to bed and catching up on some much needed sleep. :)
Third Thursday
Thursday, March 17, 2011
6 – 9 p.m.
Museum-wide
Tonight, it's Clash of the Titans!
HERO WORSHIP YOURSELF. First, take the Third Thursday God & Goddess Facebook quiz. Then check out art glorifying your mythological alter ego.
LOOK DIVINE in a photo booth with styling help from /l'étoile magazine.
SEE THE ACTION of the 1981 claymation cult classic Clash of the Titans. (Film starts at 6:30 p.m.)
BE SPELLBOUND by local guitar god Hastings 3000.
STROLL UP to the cash bar for heavenly libations and nectars of the gods.
Information on upcoming Third Thursdays:
www.artsmia.org/index.php?section_id=284
Photos: Lacey Criswell
Built in 1936-1937, this Early Modern church was designed by Paul Schweiker for the congregation of the Third Unitarian Church of Chicago, founded in 1868, which was previously located in East Garfield Park. The building was expanded in 1956 with an addition to the north of the original building, designed by William B. Fyfe. The building is clad in Chicago common brick with the original wing having a low-pitch gabled roof, large bays featuring windows with wooden mullions and wooden spandrel panels, and a two-story wing on the south side of the original building, and a wing added in 1956, which features a sawtooth front facade, brick pilasters at the entrance doors, a thin canopy at the entrance, and ribbon windows on the rear facade. Inside, the sanctuary, which occupies part of the original building and the second story of the west side of the 1956 addition, features exposed brick walls, decorative mosaics, multi-colored abstract stained glass windows, wooden paneling, and a wooden balcony within the original building. The building was designated a Chicago Landmark in 2008. Today, the building remains in active use as the Third Unitarian Church of Chicago, serving a diverse congregation from the surrounding neighborhoods and adjacent suburbs.