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Wednesday, March 4, 2020

The Museum of Art History in Lancaster, California





The Museum of Art History
has a prominent location
on THE BLVD.







The Gift Shop








The first room Eric and I enter...


                                                        ... has oversized photos.  Really BIG ones.

 Surfing Soweto, Johannesburg, 2014






Here's a "close up" of
the photo.
 Artist Jay Mark Johnson uses a special scanning camera to create his works.

 Victoria Falls #96, Zimbabwe, 2014 is so large that it turns the corner.





And a photo of a small segment
shows the delicate details
 of cascading water.


Carbon Dating #1, Hazard, Kentucky, 2008 





The close up shows the
dust kicked up by the
giant construction
vehicles.






Sideshow Siem Reap #3. Cambodia, 2012





People walking & on bikes
at the bottom of the photo
have very long shadows.




 Moore Family Trust Gallery features the art of subatomic particles.





Blow Up 327- the Long Goodbye -
Subatomic Decay Patterns & the
Pleiades Cluster with Nebulous
Filaments, 2015 by Kysa Johnson




Blow Up 410 - The Long Goodbye -
the Creation of Hydrocarbons in the
Carina Nebula, 2020
 by Kysa Johnson


 






Eric take our time with Edwin 
Vasquez's The Light of Space, 2019
Digital Fractals 





We step into a dark room to view
GO HOME, 2019
Time, Sound, Video, Photography,
Paint Wood by Jeff Frost






Eric & I add to Frost's work,
for just a moment.





 Letters on Sunspots records Shana Mabari's astronomical observations
in Ibizza Spain in 2018 & 2019.






Uranus 50,724 km 2019












Eric stands in Mary Anna Pomonis'
display Iris Oculus















I take a photo of She Gathers
Me in Radiant Light, 2019
 through the latticework.







Pomonis' work focuses on the crossroads of mysticism, abstract painting, and geometry.





She is Animated, 2019






Robert Standish's Spectrum is
 part of a series representing
the artist's perceptions of
 undercurrents of the
 human condition.




In the Presence Of, 2019
by Robert Standish













Eric & I step into
Contained Radiance Lancaster

Laddie John Dill's effort to show
nature in cycles & moments.





The play of light on etched metal changes each piece, depending on where the viewer is standing.





Backlit mountains draw
the visitor to this piece
to think about structure
& light.






Art makes the viewer think.  For me, Contemporary Art slows down the thought process and leads to wonder.

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