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Throwback Thursday: (Let's try to get back in the groove of this here)
This is me and my cousin Justin, circa 1993 or 1994, in a park playing our Gameboys.
Things of note: Gameboys are from 1989. I still have mine and it works but i have misplaced it in the last couple of years. Justin is small for his age, i dont even know how old he is here but he is a prodigy and we played Nintendo all the time...
I am wearing a Pearl Jam "Alive" shirt which has since disintegrated.
I particularly find this photo hilarious b/c we are in this beautiful park, in nature, and what are we doing...our generation was so far ahead of today's generation, i tell ya!
Back when Henderson had Scarlett on the corner I have really stepped up my roller game. I am very happy on how this came out I really want to shoot more cars lucky me summer is almost here. So car people hit me up so we can have rad hangs and some rad images.
Where have you been?” asked DeGrazia when he met New York sculptor Marion Sheret as she visited the first DeGrazia studio at Prince Road and Campbell Avenue. They married in the jungles of Mexico in 1947, lived at the studio, then bought the 10-acre foothills site near Tucson that became DeGrazia Gallery in the Sun. Marion was instrumental in DeGrazia’s success, according to longtime DeGrazia friend Dick Frontain, “I don’t think he would have done it without her. In fact, I’m sure he wouldn’t. She was the drive he needed.”
Okay, another baseball Throwback Thursday... Name this MLB Playoffs participant & his current team.
Daniel Descalso (UC Davis Aggies, 2005-07) - St. Louis Cardinals.
In the early 1970’s, Southwestern artist Ted DeGrazia became fascinated with the medium and created hundreds of enameled copper and silver objects including pieces of jewelry, sculptures, and enamel on copper paintings. Happy Throwback Thursday!
Please join us for the opening reception of “Enamel on Copper Paintings of Ted DeGrazia”! January 30th, from 5-7pm, at the Gallery in the Sun.
This image taken May 9 from a window on the south side of Grant Hall, shows red lines on the left that mark the location of the wall behind the gallows where four of the Lincoln conspirators’ were hanged July 7, 1865, after being sentenced in a military tribunal that began May 9, 1865. The red rectangles between the wall and tennis court mark the graves where they were originally buried, and the blue-taped areas on the tennis court show where the gallows stood. Read more about the tribunal on page 3. (Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall PAO photo Damien Salas)