MORE clotheslines in Venice. Is there ANYTHING ugly in this city? No, there's not. Except fat tourists.
© Timothy C. Tyler official website
Artist Helga Stentzel hangs socks, undergarments, and sweaters in playful compositions that appear like animals in a landscape.
Ralph STEINER :: Clotheslines, NYC, 1925 Marjorie CONTENT :: Laundry, NYC, ca. 1934 Berenice ABBOTT :: Court of the First Model Tenement, 12th St and 1st Ave, NYC, 1936 Washday, Yard of tenement at...
Schoonover, who used to run Smith Opera House, will be at Clothesline next weekend.
Instead of tossing an old pair of pants or T-shirt, Helga Stentzel puts her tired garments out to pasture. So far, the London-based artist has added Pegasus and Smoothie, a pair of clothesline equine and bovine, to her herd of playful interventions hung in bucolic landscapes. Stenzel’s practice, which she terms “household surrealism,” is derived from her childhood in Siberia, where she spent hours surveying her grandmother’s carpet, birch logs, and random objects for recognizable forms, including “a stack of buckets resembling the tower of Pisa,” she tells Colossal. More
This post continues to show photos of Clotheslines taken in Venice. I wanted to thanks to Britt-Arnhild from Britt-Arnhild's House in the Woods and to Roz, from Autumn Cottage Diarist, for its beautiful photos. My thanks also to Eduardo, from Varal de Idéias , for the inspiration to this Clothesline's Post. Photo by Britt-Arnhild from Britt-Arnhild's House in the Woods Photo by Fernando de Amorim Mascaro Photo by Fernando de Amorim Mascaro Photo by Britt-Arnhild from Britt-Arnhild's House in the Woods Photo by Britt-Arnhild from Britt-Arnhild's House in the Woods Photo by Roz Cawley from Ladies of a Certain Age Welcome You... Photos by Neti's House Photo by Immagini di Venezia Photo by Immagini di Venezia Photo by Immagini di Venezia Photo by Immagini di Venezia Photo by Immagini di Venezia