Google Patents Safety controls for an electrical powered lawn mowerĭownload PDF Info Publication number US3230695A US3230695A US125140A US12514061A US3230695A US 3230695 A US3230695 A US 3230695A US 125140 A US125140 A US 125140A US 12514061 A US12514061 A US 12514061A US 3230695 A US3230695 A US 3230695A Authority US United States Prior art keywords motor switch terminal mower winding Prior art date Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google Patents US3230695A - Safety controls for an electrical powered lawn mower The parking spot may be hard to come by, but it will be well worth the effort.US3230695A - Safety controls for an electrical powered lawn mower So if you happen to be driving through this neighborhood, I would highly recommend trying to find a parking spot nearby and checking out this delightful work of art. The head is made out of fiberglass, the body is made out of urethane and foam, and the lawn mower is “partially composed of a chunk of repurposed telephone pole.” This information is courtesy of Scott Indrisek of. I wish it were possible to walk around the sculpture so I could see it from different views, but street traffic and the locked gate made that wish impossible to fulfill. I tend not to think of famous people doing mundane things. Watching Pablo Picasso mowing his lawn is a lot of fun. My third reaction was to enjoy the humor of the situation. My second reaction was admiration-the sculpture is expressive and well-done it looks great from a distance. My first reaction to seeing this sculpture was a surprise. First sketched in 2004 and titled after the American painting by Edward Hicks, ‘A Peaceable Kingdom,’ is derived from images Arkin created as cartoonist-in-residence (along with Nicole Eisenman)…” The sculptures were the subject of ‘A Peaceable Kingdom,’ a recent major solo exhibition at the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art’s (MAMAC) roof-top garden in Nicke, France. “The Spanish Gardener is Elliott Arkin’s largest work to date and is a continuation in his series depicting historical figures as gardening lawn gnomes. This is from the description of the sculpture that was posted on the gate: Elliott Arkin, ‘The Spanish Gardener’, Brooklyn, NY, Photo by Howard Schwartz This sculpture has a name: ‘The Spanish Gardener.’ Picasso will be mowing the lawn at this location until July 15, 2018. The unassuming street corner is Degraw Street and Columbia Street in the Columbia Waterfront District. I was not viewing this work of art in a gallery or museum I was viewing it on an unassuming street corner in Brooklyn. My first emotion upon seeing it was a surprise. It turns out that upon closer inspection, one could see that this was not the real Pablo Picasso, but rather a sculpture that was artfully made by Elliott Arkin. The rectangular patch of grass was small enough that two steps in any direction would have been enough to cover most of the area. He was wearing a black and white horizontally striped shirt and he was wearing shorts. The grass was short enough the way it was, but at least Picasso was dressed appropriately for the occasion. It was a sickly green color with uneven patches of yellow. The rectangular patch of grass was not even worth mowing. Every minute Picasso spent mowing his lawn was one minute he wasn’t able to spend with a paintbrush in one hand and a palette in the other, working on his latest painting. He was inside a fence, which was unusual, and the expression on his face, with both eyes bulging and a look of disgust on his thin lips, made me think that he felt he was wasting his time. I looked across the street and saw Pablo Picasso mowing his lawn.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |