More "Breaking the Habit" photos
Oct. 18th, 2005 09:15 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I think these give you more of a sense of how much art there was. These still do not show how much was up there.
Next to the main room was a room with paintings and concrete works:

A working electric knife and fan are embedded in concrete on the lower right. The large painting was listed at over $1,000, but that's because he did not want to sell it. It's one of those, "If someone offered me some outrageous amount of money, I'd sell it" calculations. The smaller pieces are block prints, I think.
Part of Adrienne's room. The local cop (who had such a fine time with us on Friday night) was so confused by her "shush" paintings (the 2 in the middle). The figures are making "shush"ing gestures. "Why?" he kept asking me. It's Adrienne. I'm sure she doesn't know why she did it.

My favorite painting of hers, which she sold, is on the far right. It has a person walking with a triangular bag on his shoulder. I like the composition.
One of the first rooms, with Scott, a pretty good photographer who works with wi_c and SR

The photographs are of a model at Hillside, one of the Taliesin buildings. The model was originally built in the late 1920s and is in pretty bad shape. I'm glad I like his photos because as a person he really bugs the crap out of me.
My favorite paintings by Amie

These were bird feathers, i think.
One of Dan's pieces. He had some pretty nice conceptual art.

This is a fish bowl with canned peaches. It was oddly beautiful (the photo doesn't really capture that).
He also had a table setting with the silverware beautifully wrapped up together in twine. I think what was one of the "Southern Hospitality" pieces. It was a little mind zinger. There was another "Southern Hospitality" with a broom carefully placed in front of a mirror; the mirror reflecting the room. I haven't quite figured out what that's about.

A working electric knife and fan are embedded in concrete on the lower right. The large painting was listed at over $1,000, but that's because he did not want to sell it. It's one of those, "If someone offered me some outrageous amount of money, I'd sell it" calculations. The smaller pieces are block prints, I think.
Part of Adrienne's room. The local cop (who had such a fine time with us on Friday night) was so confused by her "shush" paintings (the 2 in the middle). The figures are making "shush"ing gestures. "Why?" he kept asking me. It's Adrienne. I'm sure she doesn't know why she did it.

My favorite painting of hers, which she sold, is on the far right. It has a person walking with a triangular bag on his shoulder. I like the composition.
One of the first rooms, with Scott, a pretty good photographer who works with wi_c and SR

The photographs are of a model at Hillside, one of the Taliesin buildings. The model was originally built in the late 1920s and is in pretty bad shape. I'm glad I like his photos because as a person he really bugs the crap out of me.
My favorite paintings by Amie

These were bird feathers, i think.
One of Dan's pieces. He had some pretty nice conceptual art.

This is a fish bowl with canned peaches. It was oddly beautiful (the photo doesn't really capture that).
He also had a table setting with the silverware beautifully wrapped up together in twine. I think what was one of the "Southern Hospitality" pieces. It was a little mind zinger. There was another "Southern Hospitality" with a broom carefully placed in front of a mirror; the mirror reflecting the room. I haven't quite figured out what that's about.