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Artwork Featuring Hats

Kuki

One of the Regulars
Messages
277
Location
Barcelona
IMG_3008.JPG I love this portrait of a painter named Joaquim Vayreda i Vila, done by painter Antoni Caba in 1870.
 

Bigger Don

Practically Family
At 10:35 AM on December 17, 1903, two sons of a preacher man from my home town availed themselves of the winds of Kitty Hawk, NC, to prove that man could fly. There are a few things around town here that celebrate the world's first aeronautical engineers. Here are the most prominent.

View attachment 62865
There are a few of these benches around town. This one is located at Woodland Cemetery, where Orville and Wilbur are buried.

View attachment 62866
This is located at Deeds Point downtown. Wilbur, on the right, is demonstrating how "wing warping" was conceived. An idea he got from playing with a model airplane box while working in their bicycle shop/lab in West Dayton.

View attachment 62867
Recreation of the historic First Flight photograph. Also downtown.
This is my favorite because it reflects the relatively short accomplishment, in time and distance, when considered from 100+ years later. When I first saw it I thought of the Wright brothers biography I read as a child. After the flight in Kitty Hawk the author described how the Wrights continued their work, to the point that flights were not uncommon up on Huffman Prairie. (For those not from around Funky Town, that was the outskirts of Dayton.
15516807084_085c45e794.jpg

Artist David Black’s “Flyover” sculpture sits in the middle of downtown Dayton on Main Street between Fourth and Fifth Streets. The abstract sculpture is a recreation of the Wright Brothers’ first 12-second flight. The curve matches the actual flight path, and there is a set of wings representing each second of the Dayton natives’ flight. Photo: DREW SIMON / STAFF
http://www.dayton.com/what-to-love/must-see-public-art-dayton/
 
Messages
19,137
Location
Funkytown, USA
This is my favorite because it reflects the relatively short accomplishment, in time and distance, when considered from 100+ years later. When I first saw it I thought of the Wright brothers biography I read as a child. After the flight in Kitty Hawk the author described how the Wrights continued their work, to the point that flights were not uncommon up on Huffman Prairie. (For those not from around Funky Town, that was the outskirts of Dayton.
15516807084_085c45e794.jpg

Artist David Black’s “Flyover” sculpture sits in the middle of downtown Dayton on Main Street between Fourth and Fifth Streets. The abstract sculpture is a recreation of the Wright Brothers’ first 12-second flight. The curve matches the actual flight path, and there is a set of wings representing each second of the Dayton natives’ flight. Photo: DREW SIMON / STAFF
http://www.dayton.com/what-to-love/must-see-public-art-dayton/

If you hit the angle just right, it seems to "move" while you're driving along Main Street. Although when erected, we made fun of it as a rejected King's Island ride.


Huffman Prairie, where the Wrights truly learned and perfected the art of flying, is on Wright-Patterson AFB, but is accessible to the public. As is the Wright Memorial and Education Center. I highly recommend seeing them if you like aircraft at all. And who doesn't think flying is cool?
 

Bigger Don

Practically Family
we made fun of it as a rejected King's Island ride.
Not a revitalization of Fantasy Farm or Lesourdsville? Perhaps moving the "riots" of Russells Point to a more convenient location?
Wright Memorial and Education Center
Not sure where that is. When we first moved to the Dayton area we went to the Carillon Museum which had one of the early Wright flyers. Of course, there's the USAF museum, where you, too, can see a plane that I touched and helped maintain. Last, and hardly least, on this list of Dayton's continued appreciation of the bicycle makers is the Wright B flyer at Dayton-Wright Brothers Airport (aka Miamisburg/Springboro International).
 
Messages
19,137
Location
Funkytown, USA
Not a revitalization of Fantasy Farm or Lesourdsville? Perhaps moving the "riots" of Russells Point to a more convenient location?

Not sure where that is. When we first moved to the Dayton area we went to the Carillon Museum which had one of the early Wright flyers. Of course, there's the USAF museum, where you, too, can see a plane that I touched and helped maintain. Last, and hardly least, on this list of Dayton's continued appreciation of the bicycle makers is the Wright B flyer at Dayton-Wright Brothers Airport (aka Miamisburg/Springboro International).

The Memorial is off Kauffman Rd. near Rt. 4, up on the hill.


Sent directly from my mind to yours.
 

mmbarnes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
4,202
Location
A tad northwest of Richmond, VA
michael-sweerts-hocc82-et-cracc82ne.jpg


Intriguing image c. 1660 by Michael Sweerts of a man with a skull and one heck of a large-brimmed old world hat. It is thought to be a self-portrait.

From a website:

"When Alfred Bader acquired the painting in 1968, the skull had been painted out. A previous owner obviously thought it too crude, but the skull’s omission left the man’s pointing finger without aim or purpose. This is a theatrical painting and although it was not unusual for 17th century painters to portray themselves with a skull, Sweerts takes it a step further: the man does not only point at it but inserts his finger in the nasal cavity, giving the painting a dramatic tension and mystery that lends an unusual twist to such a time-honoured vanitas symbol.

Michael Sweerts looks straight at us while he emphatically draws our attention to the skull. We are torn between it and his intense gaze. It makes us feel somewhat uncomfortable but at the same time it intrigues and pulls us irrevocably into the painting. He opens his mouth as if to speak to us but we hear no sound."
 

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