I got them! Planning to post in the other thread, just trying to figure how much I should crop out…I mean, it’s not my house or my things…)
Do. It.
I wonder why children and etiquette are ticked off?
For anyone else who finds this book as fascinating as I do, I found this resource:
You can search by key word and jump to the section. In honor of our intrepid cat sitter, I started with Minneapolis:
Is that a huge print, or has someone spray-painted the tarp/canvas? Any idea who the artist is?
I think it was print on canvas.
Soilspace by Zheng Mahler
The artwork acts as a subterranean window, evoking the idea of how cities built on graves and burial sites form part of wider ‘soil communities’. The 3D models weave together folkloric, historical, and biological representations that interact across multiple temporal axes on the site. The work is a form of ancestor worship dedicated to the multitude of spirits in the soil that have shaped and continue to shape the spaces we inhabit.
Zheng Mahler is a collective formed by artist Royce Ng and anthropologist Daisy Bisenieks.
There used be a railroad there. You might have seen it…
Maybe they were treated rudely?
(please laugh)
Great! Now you’ve got all the calamities and hygiene you need
Minneapolis is third, and it’s on the banks of a river? Wow.
My question is, why would someone want to know what cities are the three highest large cities in the U.S.? Why not the four highest? Where do you draw the line? Obviously that person knew where to draw it, and they stuck to it.
I wondered if, like the previous question on that page, it was to settle a bet or something.
I’d figured that Pittsburgh was both higher & (perhaps back then) larger than Atlanta.
I didn’t come here to do math