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Snow Globes
My younger cousin collected snow globes as a child. Her father would bring her back a new collectible from wherever he had traveled and she'd line them up on shelves. These were the usual cheap variety, the plastic ones with the Empire State Building you could buy at any shop lining Times Square. They weren't very interesting to look at, but I liked the idea of them.
I once owned a snow globe for about 10 minutes, from the time my mother gave me the unwrapped package at Christmas to the time the globe slipped out of my hands and shattered on the floor. It contained a scene from The Wizard of Oz. I actually really liked it (a piece of a story recreated and stuck in time), but the store no longer had that particular globe in stock so I exchanged it for Aeon Flux tapes. Not a bad trade as far as I was concerned. Occasionally I'll come across one that I note as beautiful or charming. A little world sculpted and infinitely contained. A frozen moment in time, an object living up to its name. The idea of the snow globe was used to great effect in Sebold's The Lovely Bones, and in the zombie film Cemetery Man ("I'd give my life to be dead." - hah!), based on the novel Dellamorte Dellamore's (which I haven't read). I came across these today, and they are miniature stories on pause. Grim and delightful. ![]() Like a favorite horror movie Dolls, I can almost imagine that these are real people trapped by a punishing witch. There is something so otherworldly about them. Each deserves its own longer story. |
Grim and delightful indeed.
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Those are very cool and quite calming in a way.
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It would be impossible for me to go to that gallery showing and not shake all of them. Very cool find, A!
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A sculpture teacher I had in college made a giant wooden ball and covered it with iron handles. The desire to touch it, climb it, was strong in most viewers, but you weren't supposed to touch it. It actually angered him that some people would touch it, because there wasn't a sign that said not to and clearly it was an object intended for interaction. Seemed silly that he couldn't grasp that. Also cool when something you make is not viewed as you intended, even if that's frustrating for some artists. |
Clearly, when on display, there should be some mechanical device that periodically shakes the globes, so they can be properly viewed. That's the compromise made in a gallery situation.
I happen to love them with or without the snow. Not only do they practically MAKE ME imagine being in the beautiful, miniaturized scene ... they also somehow remind me of the intricate scenes I've seen carved miraculously into the heads of pins. |
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Those are really cool!!! And Dolls has been added to my netflix list, woot!
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Make sure you get the Stuart Gordon Dolls, and not the Takeshi Kitano movie.
Actually, the Takeshi one is pretty cool too, but certainly not what EH1812 is talking about. |
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Really? I've been twice in the last 4 months.
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I've been at least once in the last 4, as well. Though it could honestly use some down time to take care of some much needed repairs. A good many of the first room exhibits aren't operating as they should, which is a bummer.
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Those are really cool snow globes!
And if you like those you may also like Thomas Doyle's miniature art. My favorite: The reprisal ![]() I can just see something like that sitting in Gil Grissom's office. |
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The MoJT is still open and operating.
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I'm so relieved. I read an article last year about their demise. I have been misinformed. And saved by the LoT.
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