James Abbott mural detail, Elma, Washington
Showing posts with label murals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label murals. Show all posts
Sunday, November 10, 2013
Phone photo 3003
Labels:
chickens,
Elma,
James Abbott,
murals,
Phone photo,
Rusty Tractor
Phone photo 3002
Phone photo 3001
James Abbott mural, Elma, Washington. He played with perspective in this one more than in his other works. It faces east, protecting it from the coastal winds, so this is in a better state of preservation than most.
Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Phone photo 2904
Labels:
Baseball,
Crowd (Mural),
Gu Xiong,
murals,
Phone photo,
Safeco Field,
Seattle
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Postcard - Detroit, Michigan
"Detroit Public Library, 5201 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Michigan 48202, Adam Strohm Hall. An exhibition center for the display of books and other cultural materials. This room of outstanding architectural beauty is enhanced by the mural triptych on Man's Mobility, designed and executed by Detroit artist John S. Coppin."
1970s probably.
1970s probably.
Labels:
Detroit,
Detroit Public Library,
John S. Coppin,
Librarianship,
murals,
postcards
Sunday, September 22, 2013
Phone photo 2862
Labels:
James Abbott,
McCleary,
murals,
Phone photo,
Rhodes Grocery
Saturday, September 21, 2013
Phone photo 2861
James Abbott mural detail and decay, McCleary, Washington. This is one of his later works. TBTG is probably for "Thanks Be to God."
Phone photo 2860
Detail of James Abbott mural in McCleary, Washington. The teacher portrayed in this picture is based on Emma Heslep (1902-1974) who was also a published poet.
Labels:
Emma Heslep,
James Abbott,
McCleary,
murals,
Phone photo
Phone photo 2859
James Abbott mural, McCleary Washington
I notice here and in Elma, his murals painted on waferboard appear to hold up a little better over time.
Phone photo 2858
Of the four portraits by James Abbott adorning the front of the old Rhodes Grocery, this one of George Osgood (1868-1955) is the best.
Osgood was an early business partner of Henry McCleary.
Osgood was an early business partner of Henry McCleary.
Labels:
George Osgood,
Henry McCleary,
James Abbott,
McCleary,
murals,
Phone photo,
Rhodes Grocery
Phone photo 2857
James Abbott's absolutely awful and almost unrecognizable portrait of Ada Johnson McCleary (1861-1923). She was a remarkable person who knew how to use her power as the First Lady of McCleary to improve the lives of the people in the town.
Labels:
Ada McCleary,
James Abbott,
McCleary,
murals,
Phone photo
Phone photo 2856
James Abbott portrait of Henry McCleary (1861-1943), the timber baron who virtually ran this town as a one-man principality until 1941.
This is a portrait of a timid person, and Henry was many things, but never that.
This is a portrait of a timid person, and Henry was many things, but never that.
Labels:
Henry McCleary,
James Abbott,
McCleary,
murals,
Phone photo
Phone photo 2855
James Abbott's mural portrait of a very young Nick Rillakis (1893-1970), McCleary, Washington. By the time I met Nick in 1964 he was a large, stout man with no hair at all. Nick was one of the last of what was once a large Greek population in town.
A bombastic and flamboyant fellow, he ran a store in town called Rhodes Grocery, the first concrete structure in McCleary. I recall he had a huge cheese wheel as a centerpiece. Today his store serves as cram-yer-crap place and is covered with Abbott artwork.
The waferboard "canvas" gives this and the other portraits a nice texture.
A bombastic and flamboyant fellow, he ran a store in town called Rhodes Grocery, the first concrete structure in McCleary. I recall he had a huge cheese wheel as a centerpiece. Today his store serves as cram-yer-crap place and is covered with Abbott artwork.
The waferboard "canvas" gives this and the other portraits a nice texture.
Labels:
Greece,
James Abbott,
McCleary,
murals,
Nick Rillakis,
Phone photo,
Rhodes Grocery
Friday, September 20, 2013
Phone photo 2854
Four portraits by James Abbott at the entrance of the old Rhodes Grocery, long ago converted to a cram-yer-crap storage business. So far as I know, this little alcove is unique in the Abbott art experience in that he has an area where human faces are the main focus. This was not his strong point and the combined effect is actually sort of like eating stale bread.
I bet if we took a poll here in McCleary, Washington (pop. about 1600) on who these four portraits are supposed to represent the results would be enormously embarrassing to the town. So, at the risk of sounding like a know-it-all, stick with this blog and in the words of Sherlock Holmes, "observe and learn." I even personally met one of the subjects portrayed here.
Also, this is a spot where certain inebriated people like to hover for awhile. How one can do that while all those eyes at your back, I don't know, but they do.
I bet if we took a poll here in McCleary, Washington (pop. about 1600) on who these four portraits are supposed to represent the results would be enormously embarrassing to the town. So, at the risk of sounding like a know-it-all, stick with this blog and in the words of Sherlock Holmes, "observe and learn." I even personally met one of the subjects portrayed here.
Also, this is a spot where certain inebriated people like to hover for awhile. How one can do that while all those eyes at your back, I don't know, but they do.
Labels:
Ada McCleary,
George Osgood,
Henry McCleary,
James Abbott,
McCleary,
murals,
Nick Rillakis,
Phone photo,
Rhodes Grocery
Phone photo 2853
James Abbott and the ravages of the elements teamed up to form this nice impressionistic detail on his last remaining mural in McCleary, Washington. I love the way Abbott used the reflection of our typically wet roads in this piece.
This particular image actually faces an alley, so it is missed by anyone just passing through.
This particular image actually faces an alley, so it is missed by anyone just passing through.
Labels:
impressionism,
James Abbott,
McCleary,
murals,
Phone photo
Phone photo 2852
Phone photo 2851
Phone photo 2850
Phone photo 2849
Phone photo 2848
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