This blog is an ARTISTIC regional photo journal. I focus on mundane scenes. ANY AND ALL STATEMENTS I MAKE HERE ARE MY OPINONS ONLY! I OFFER NOTHING WHATSOEVER AS A STATEMENT OF FACT! The photographs are offered as ARTISTIC EXPRESSION ONLY! They are not representative of anything other than themselves. Most of the places mentioned here have surely changed substantially since they were visited. Check my list of recommended sites at the bottom of this blog!
Friday, April 6, 2018
Thursday, April 5, 2018
My Wife's Camera 2
So this is more stuff from 2014 that never got posted. Things were going very well for us then-- she was still healthy enough to do many things. We enjoyed walking together. She was very active in her rose garden. Roses require a lot of effort, as I have learned since taking it over. Results are worth it though.
So, after visiting the tiny house I used to occupy many years ago, we stumbled upon the ruins left after a house fire. This was back in 2014 remember.
Terrible destruction!
The house next door got scorched, too. This was a poor neighborhood. Very unlikely that anyone affected by this fire had insurance.
Very sad.
We moved on to the site of the old YMCA near the TTU campus. My wife recalled that before it became that, it was a church. But whatever it was it was abandoned when we looked at it. I belonged to a chess club once, and we used to meet there Saturday afternoon. I was a Freshman. I recall seeing Drueke plastic chessmen for the first time there. A math professor, Dr. Underwood, used such a set. I was impressed! Eventually I got a set of triple-weighted Drueke's of my own. Eventually, in a used bookstore, years and years later, I found a little pamphlet by Dr. Underwood: "Silhouette Mathematics". In that pamphlet he described a quick graphical method of solving simultaneous equations with many variables. Exponents were no problem-- everything got mapped into a 2 space. It seemed for a while to be a promising approach to Fermat's Last Theorem. I digress.
The old building was overgrown with vines!
Well, I'll continue this next time!
So, after visiting the tiny house I used to occupy many years ago, we stumbled upon the ruins left after a house fire. This was back in 2014 remember.
Terrible destruction!
The house next door got scorched, too. This was a poor neighborhood. Very unlikely that anyone affected by this fire had insurance.
Very sad.
We moved on to the site of the old YMCA near the TTU campus. My wife recalled that before it became that, it was a church. But whatever it was it was abandoned when we looked at it. I belonged to a chess club once, and we used to meet there Saturday afternoon. I was a Freshman. I recall seeing Drueke plastic chessmen for the first time there. A math professor, Dr. Underwood, used such a set. I was impressed! Eventually I got a set of triple-weighted Drueke's of my own. Eventually, in a used bookstore, years and years later, I found a little pamphlet by Dr. Underwood: "Silhouette Mathematics". In that pamphlet he described a quick graphical method of solving simultaneous equations with many variables. Exponents were no problem-- everything got mapped into a 2 space. It seemed for a while to be a promising approach to Fermat's Last Theorem. I digress.
The old building was overgrown with vines!
Well, I'll continue this next time!
Tuesday, April 3, 2018
New Abstractions, My Wife's Camera From 2014
I whipped out the abstractions in the garage, and it was too easy.
Surely, using a digital camera to create the final product trivializes the product. For one thing, it becomes infinitely reproducible. You can also use a macro lens and zoom in on subareas to create "new work". That breaks all the rules. Then again, the traditional rules of traditional art might be stupid.
The thing above is just a gouge in the sheet rock that lines the garage. It is a kind of "found object". Below, more of those found objects:
Lets move on to photos I took in 2014 with my wife's camera, that I bought for her on eBay, that were never posted here. I just found these. She was with me, of course, and she took two of these photos. I'll point out the ones she took, when we get to that point.
We visited a playa lake near Ave U. This must have been in the Fall. Judging by all the migratory birds.
For a few years in the 1970's I lived in this place when it was an apartment! It was like a small house ahead of its time. It did not look so bad then. I described it to my wife, sketching the floor plan, and we day dreamed of ways it could have been made more livable and space efficient. She was fascinated by small houses. Amazingly, we examined small houses in Spur that were tinier than this! Insane!
I will continue with pics from my wife's camera next time...
Surely, using a digital camera to create the final product trivializes the product. For one thing, it becomes infinitely reproducible. You can also use a macro lens and zoom in on subareas to create "new work". That breaks all the rules. Then again, the traditional rules of traditional art might be stupid.
The thing above is just a gouge in the sheet rock that lines the garage. It is a kind of "found object". Below, more of those found objects:
Lets move on to photos I took in 2014 with my wife's camera, that I bought for her on eBay, that were never posted here. I just found these. She was with me, of course, and she took two of these photos. I'll point out the ones she took, when we get to that point.
We visited a playa lake near Ave U. This must have been in the Fall. Judging by all the migratory birds.
For a few years in the 1970's I lived in this place when it was an apartment! It was like a small house ahead of its time. It did not look so bad then. I described it to my wife, sketching the floor plan, and we day dreamed of ways it could have been made more livable and space efficient. She was fascinated by small houses. Amazingly, we examined small houses in Spur that were tinier than this! Insane!
I will continue with pics from my wife's camera next time...
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