Here's some more things from Arlington Arts Center:
Theresa Knight McFadden made this painting on how things in the Bible might look today. This one is "Holy Women II - St Matthew's Secretary."
In close-up, you can see her coffee of cherubic origin, and the inevitable-workdesk-photo-of-secretarial-loved-one
and there were the other depictions on the bottom panels. Here, St. Sebastian gets some medical help.
Patricia Helsing made this painting, where all kinds of news-story boogedy boogedy FEARS (disease, guns, poisons, nuke bomb) are depicted in the painting
and the frame, which has pics of mushroom clouds and little gold vials labeled "anthrax," "ricin," "SARS," and on and on. I figured Antimony would dig the SARS.
Here's a photo of a backroad of London, "London 2," by Ken Ashton. A photo of a photo, so I guess it looks like a photo except for the weak-ass little disposable camera flash in the right side.
Lastly some creature sculpture. Frank Fishburne did this metal one, "Avian Gothic."
And Andrea Uravitch did this one, hot on the heels of the 2004 cicada craze, "Remains (Cicada Shell)."

Theresa Knight McFadden made this painting on how things in the Bible might look today. This one is "Holy Women II - St Matthew's Secretary."

In close-up, you can see her coffee of cherubic origin, and the inevitable-workdesk-photo-of-secretarial-loved-one

and there were the other depictions on the bottom panels. Here, St. Sebastian gets some medical help.

Patricia Helsing made this painting, where all kinds of news-story boogedy boogedy FEARS (disease, guns, poisons, nuke bomb) are depicted in the painting

and the frame, which has pics of mushroom clouds and little gold vials labeled "anthrax," "ricin," "SARS," and on and on. I figured Antimony would dig the SARS.

Here's a photo of a backroad of London, "London 2," by Ken Ashton. A photo of a photo, so I guess it looks like a photo except for the weak-ass little disposable camera flash in the right side.

Lastly some creature sculpture. Frank Fishburne did this metal one, "Avian Gothic."

And Andrea Uravitch did this one, hot on the heels of the 2004 cicada craze, "Remains (Cicada Shell)."


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I'd consider that a blow-out in any sport.