Bootlegger

Oct. 1st, 2009 10:23 pm
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High waist pant design by Nikki Rose
Model, Nikki Rose
Photography & Photomanipulation, Michael R. Barrick ("Atratus")
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Created from a picture I took at Sin City last Hallowe'en (model: Rheannon Lena McMullen) and a photograph from when I visited the Art Institute of Chicago in 2004.
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Looking east


Looking south north east.
The hotel we stayed at is the building with the light-well in the centre at centre right of the photo. Our room was in the "new" wing which is just barely visible at the extreme right of the image.
The large fountain is the Buckingham Fountain. You may know it from the opening credits of "Married with Children".



Looking west. Not much this way is there?
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Looking down from a landmark building. See if you can guess the city before following the cut. The picture under the cut is looking up from the opposing angle this one is looking down from, from the position of the crosswalk you can see at the top edge of the frame at the centre.


Oversize image: 400 x 1321 px, 98 KB )
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Into the Art Institute of Chicago, starting with the arms and armour display:


Nice



Nicer



Swank
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...a tour of the Art Institute of Chicago.



The AIC is the building on the right.



Tintoreto Rubens Velasquez...
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The main branch of the public library in Chicago.



A closer view of the roof ornamentation.
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Looking up from the street:


Looking down from the Sears Tower:

(Larry, you can see that high-rise prison near the top right of this one)
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Metra station, patterned after Paris Metro, Congress Plaza, Chicago.
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I know I promised to put my other pictures from Chicago that aren't in my C10 gallery up and have yet to get around to it. So, here we go:


Stairs in the Congress Plaza Hotel, Chicago.
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A bug on the outside of a 103rd-floor window of the Sears Tower, approximately 413.5 meters above street level. For the sake of a local comparison, the peak of Grouse Mountain is 1,250 metres above sea-level. If this building was placed at the base of the Grouse Grind, the top of the building would be higher than the half-way mark. The black tower in the background is the John Hancock Center.
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Cornelius Huysmans is an ancestor on my maternal grandmother's quarter of the family (her maiden name was Huysmans and one of her middle names was Cornelia). Here's what the 1911 edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica has to say about him:
HUYSMANS, the name of four Flemish painters who matriculated in the Antwerp gild in the 17th century. Cornelis the elder, apprenticed in 1633, passed for a mastership in 1636, and remained obscure. Jacob, apprenticed to Frans Wouters in 1650, wandered to England towards the close of the reign of Charles II., and competed with Lely as a fashionable portrait painter. He executed a portrait of the queen, Catherine of Braganza, now in the national portrait gallery, and Horace Walpole assigns to him the likeness of Lady Bellasys, catalogued at Hampton Court as a work of Lely. His portrait of Izaak Walton in the National Gallery shows a disposition to imitate the styles of Rubens and Van Dyke. According to most accounts he died in London in 1696. Jan Baptist Huysmans, born at Antwerp in 1654, matriculated in 1676-1677, and died there in 1715-1716. He was younger brother to Cornelis Huysmans the second, who was born at Antwerp in 1648, and educated by Gaspar de Wit and Jacob van Artois. Of Jan Baptist little or nothing has been preserved, except that he registered numerous apprentices at Antwerp, and painted a landscape dated 1697 now in the Brussels museum. Cornelis the second is the only master of the name of Huysmans whose talent was largely acknowledged. He received lessons from two artists, one of whom was familiar with the Roman art of the Poussins, whilst the other inherited the scenic style of the school of Rubens. He combined the two in a rich, highly coloured, and usually effective style, which, however, was not free from monotony.

Seldom attempting anything but woodside views with fancy backgrounds, half Italian, half Flemish, he painted with great facility, and left numerous examples behind. At the outset of his career he practised at Malines, where he married in 1682, and there, too he entered into some business connection with van der Meulen, for whom he painted some backgrounds. In 1706 he withdrew to Antwerp, where he resided till 1717, returning then to Malines, where he died on the 1st of June 1727.

Though most of his pictures were composed for cabinets rather than churches, he sometimes emulated van Artois in the production of large sacred pieces, and for many years his Christ on the Road to Emmaus adorned the choir of Notre Dame of Malines. In the gallery of Nantes, where three of his small landscapes are preserved, there hangs an Investment of Ltixembourg, by van der Meulen, of which he is known to have laid in the background. The national galleries of London and Edinburgh contain each one example of his skill. Blenheim, too, and other private galleries in England, possess one or more of his pictures. But most of his works are on the European continent.
I didn't know the Art Institute of Chicago has any of his work. I know the Metropolitan in New York does, but we forgot to look for it when we were there. Obviously, not knowing that it was even there, I wasn't looking for this as we wandered through the AIC. It's a smaller piece (about 8" x 10" or so) and was hanging unceremoniously in a hallway connecting the galleries in the European section of the museum. The name caught me out of the corner of my eye and I exclaimed, "Holy shit!" rather loudly. My uncouth exclamation got the attention of a guard who then stood by confusedly watching me excitedly snap pictures of a small, minor piece by a largely unknown artist hanging in a connecting hallway in a backwater of the museum.

Teaser

May. 10th, 2004 11:01 pm
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A little teaser shot from Chicago. There are lots and lots to come. I'll be dragging out the touristy and arty shots here in the journal like I did with New York, and this will include some of the better shots from the club and other stuff directly related to Convergence, but I will also be creating a dedicated photo gallery like I did for Convergence 6.
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Well, we're into the “hurry up and wait” part of the trip home.

Convergence itself was fun. The Art Institute was fabulous. Going up the Sears Tower was just weird (it is *flat* here). All in all, though, not a place I'd want do anything more than visit. It's a prairie town with everyone (except the goths) trying out-working-class each other. Imagine
everyone from Brooklyn coming to Manhattan at the same time - that's Chicago.
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Today we did the full-on tourist thing and went to the Art Institute of Chicago (and saw “American Gothic”-lol) and went up the Sears Tower.

I was very pleasantly surprised to come across a painting by an ancestor of mine, Cornelis Huysmans, in the musem. I knew the Met had one (and we forgot to look for it when we were there) but had no idea there was one here.

Tonight is the fashion show and the last official night. We'll be home tomorrow and the deluge of photos will start Tuesday.

Day Two

May. 8th, 2004 09:41 am
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Well, getting up at what would have been 3 o'clock in the morning caused us to wear out at about... Well... 3 o'clock in the morning. But now we're well rested and off to do some “Toddlin'” around town. First order of
business today is a group photo in front of the Buckingham Fountain (it's the one show in the opening credits of “Married with Children”. Then off the explore some obscure archetectual oddities, check out the vendors, and go see more bands. Tonight is Black Tape for a Blue Girl, amongst others.

Oh, yeah... I saw a man dance with his wife.

(By the way I can't reply to comment or post pictures until we are back. I'm posting by e-mail from my Blackberry)

C10

May. 7th, 2004 04:34 pm
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Greetings from Chicago!
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Well, it's done. Elaine and I are going to Convergence 10 in Chicago. The C10 tickets are bought. The plane tickets are purchased. We have a reservation in the official hotel. It's all done. We're going to Chicago. And you can bet your sweet bippy that I'll be taking some kick-ass pictures from the top of the Sears Tower to go with the ones from the top of the Empire State Building.

Beuller...

                       Beuller...

                                                          Beuller...

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