Showing posts with label garages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label garages. Show all posts

28.8.14

Mission District Walk

An afternoon in San Francisco...
Quarry

Wrap

End of the Petroleum Age

Look Both Ways

Blue stucco

Triple door

5.8.12

Hot Weekend

Fireworks stand, Muckleshoot Reservation, Auburn WA
Industry, Mt. Vernon, WA

Crop duster, Burlington, WA

Mexican grocery, Mt. Vernon

Today/Yesteryear, Mt. Vernon

Country road, Skagit County WA


2.2.12

Near the End of the Age of Petroleum, Part IV

One Man's Eyesore... Is Another Man's Art.

"Sometimes it's OK to let an old landmark go"

I saw the above article in the local paper the other day and my Eff-Stop klaxons went off. This cool old garage was due to be torn down the next day. I hopped in the Canonmobile and sped across the lake.


From the article:
"Tom Flood, a teacher at Seattle Academy of Arts and Sciences (SAAS) [turned it] into an art studio, where kids from the Coyote Central after-school program built soapbox-derby cars (3,000 over 10 years, by Flood's estimate), and learned how to weld and build furniture. It was also the place where Flood created community art, like the metal tree in front of Madrona Elementary; works at seven other Seattle public schools; and at Childhaven."



"The garage also served as a shelter for a group of SAAS students who were brought here by teacher Roger Murray during the school's annual Seattle Challenge, which gives kids a three-day taste of homelessness."



Alas, the comments on the Seattle Times web article reflect not only the Philistine nature of the commenters as regards what constitutes art, history, and architecture, but a snarky attitude toward environmentalism and just about everything else. Reactionary Seattle at its best.


I find this "grafitti" cheerfully colorful, witty, and all-around artful -- not only compared to the typical indecipherable gang tags but more importantly compared to the ubiquitous and soul-numbing advertising that no one seems to mind covering every possible surface in our society.



4.10.09

Garage Doors: Harvest Festival

A bounteous, er, bounty of garage patterns this week, in honor of crisp fall days and farmers' markets.


A tart trio of Cubist pear-shapes




Some freshly pre-cored rectangles (click for detail)




Filigree still in the pods




A fancy Asian hybrid




Heirloom Southwest condiment

1.10.09

Garage Doors: Rectangles of the Nuclear Age

One spin on the ubiquitous rectangle features a little nucleic bar. I may be stretching a bit here but it seems slightly Sixties Futuristic, what do you think?


Three on patrol behind shrubbery



Two at ease


Four standing in formation

18.9.09

Garage Doors: 1 Big X


Appetizer, a simple but tasty X ala Dixie flag.



Main course, bone-in X with chevron remoulade.




Dessert, gatemouth X topped by a succulent melange of squares and diamonds.