
Georgetown window no. 1
Getting away from travel-related posts here for awhile and back toward art photography.

Georgetown window no. 1
Getting away from travel-related posts here for awhile and back toward art photography.

Staircase at the Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas.

iPhone photograph. This was taken on the campus of the University of Kansas, Lawrence.

Lounge in the Huntington Building of the Denver Art Museum. iPhone photo.

This cool mural is on the side of the Aims Community College building in downtown Loveland. The letters are shorthand for the four DNA bases (adenine, thymine, guanine, and cytosine); the numbers are the Fibonacci series through double digits—89, to be specific. Perhaps the doves are meant to represent human aspirations, since this is an educational institution. I’m guessing this mural was designed and painted by students, since Aims focuses on degrees in art and graphics.

Trying out a new point-and-shoot. Panasonic Lumix photograph, 310 mm (35 mm equivalent), handheld in moving car, tight crop, color-manipulated, watercolor filter applied.

Nothing more to say. iPhone photo, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City.

Taken at the Bloch Addition to the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City. iPhone photograph, slightly enhanced color.

This photograph is currently on exhibit, along with two others I’ve posted here, at Impasto Gallery in Longmont, Colo. I titled this after the Duke Ellington composition (which I’ve heard only snippets of, to my shame). This photo would work well on an album cover, I think. I took it with my iPhone last August at the Bloch Addition of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City. I have some others from that visit that I’ll be posting. No adjustments of any kind were made to this image.

Artist Mri Pilar created the extensive mosaics that cover the restroom walls at Bowl Plaza in the tiny town of Lucas, Kansas. Bowl refers to, yes, a toilet bowl. (There’s a ceramic bowl outside with various strange ceramic objects being “flushed,” as well as a giant cement roll of toilet paper on the lawn, as well as another mosaic by Pilar and mosaics by community members.) It all sounds, and is, very strange and wonderful. Bowl Plaza is just down the street from the Lucas Grassroots Art Museum, which features outsider art and which I wrote about last year. It’s also a few blocks from the “Garden of Eden,” a very large, classic assemblage of Bible-related outsider art created on and around a home in Lucas.
Bowl Plaza was closed last year for repairs, so when I drove through Kansas a few weeks ago I had to make a return trip. I haven’t yet seen Pilar’s own “Garden of Isis” in Lucas, so I need to return a third time. Her website (above) shows Bowl Plaza in progress. Here’s a detail from one of Pilar’s mosaics in the women’s restroom at Bowl Plaza. iPhone photograph.