Salome, Where She Danced: Starring Yvonne De Carlo, Rod Cameron and Walter Slezak (1945 Movie)

DVD: www.amazon.com thefilmarchived.blogspot.com Directed by Charles Lamont Produced by Alexander Golitzen (associate producer) Walter Wanger ...

Rat Rods & Pin Up Girls Hot Rods And Beer Drinking

Check out www.chiksonthehill.com for more PinUps and Rods, Kustoms and Shows. This vid & photo shoot is a kick ass old skool way of capturing ...



Cityscape - Endlessly ephemeral

It's dark inside. The aggressive graffiti on the walls battles with peeling posters. Doors swing open aided by a pulley system engineered with old sand-filled bottles. Guiding the way, with the help of his cell phone light, artist Axel Void explains how this former artists' squat in Friedrichshain, Berlin, was recently legalised when its 50 residents got together and bought the huge, rambling, poster-plastered building.

This is a familiar story in Berlin, where art and capitalism are lodged in a fierce and seemingly endless battle. Street art, the city's most rebellious sub-culture is rapidly gaining international admirers, and — as a result – enthusiastic buyers. The recent Stroke Artfair, which promised to be an ‘unconventional and uncompromising,' showcased street artists and graphic designers in an exhibition that was more commercial than edgy, with businesslike stalls featuring catalogues and whopping price tags.

Can a subculture survive if it ceases to be subversive? After all, street art's power stems from the fact that it's illegal. Its creators are admired for living on the margins of society. There's the romantic notion that spend night after night taking heady risks, with no rewards other than the satisfaction of knowing they've transformed a formerly soulless urban space with their art.

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Cityscape - Endlessly ephemeral
Cityscape - Endlessly ephemeral Guiding the way, with the help of his cell phone light, artist Axel Rod explains how this former artists' squat in Friedrichshain, Berlin, was recently legalised when its 50 residents got together and bought the huge, rambling, poster-plastered ...

Small worlds loom large in new show at the museum
Rod Serling (Twilight Zone) would love these, but with the occasional rat or menacing pterodactyl, they're a bit dark for Alice's wonderland. In one, a tree grows through the roof of a mansion's library. In another, a crow plucks at a violin on the ...





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