Art that can be construed as supporting LGBTQ+ rights
Stephen Lauf







zero seven two
2017.08.07





2
Symmetrical Confinement
2006.08.07





9
Symmetrical Confinement
2006.08.07





10
Symmetrical Confinement
2006.08.07





16
Symmetrical Confinement
2006.08.07


"How Did This Happen Revisited"
They all realized something was up when, at LIVE8 Philadelphia, Duchamp was always having these intense conversations with Adam. Marcel and Robert just told everyone that they were enjoying each other's Philadelphia Museum of Art anecdotes, seeing how the Adam drawing room from Lansdowne House is situated directly above the Duchamp gallery. Well, it all became clear what was going on at the performance of Duchamp's The Lucky Bums 4 August 2005. Marcel had asked Robert to design the sets for the play, and to "do Vanbrugh."
The Lucky Bums was a smash hit! Now everyone's reading The Good Soldier while remembering Grace, Rainier, Maria and Otto in the leading roles. And boy does Marcel know how to strictly adhere to an existing narrative.
As a surprise to everyone, Vanbrugh was the guest of honor at the performance, and, as he liked the play so much, he immediately decided to deliver a paper for the Horace Trumbauer Architecture Fan Club Convention the very next day, hence "How Did This Happen Revisited." Everyone's still amazed by all the disclosures.

2005.08.07


Brideshead Revisited
And speaking of Jude Law, I never met him either, but I did meet a character he played in 1997.

Actually, I met Danny and Jim simultaneously, in a very intimate social situation, i.e., playing Psycho Dice on a screened-in porch facing the Atlantic Ocean on a late August 1979 Sunday afternoon. I don't know what Danny was like in 1981 before Jim shot him dead, but in 1979 Danny stuck to Jim like a desperate puppy. I remember how a look in Danny's eyes told me he was beginning to get jealous of Jim, Billy P. and I having lots of fun playing games, etc.
Berendt never met Danny, but he kinda described him correctly.
The last time I saw Jim was early August 1989. He had just gotten back from Venice and spent a lot of time showing Lance travel snapshots. Jim loved to pontificate, and one of his favorite expressions was "You don't know a thing!" One of the last things I ever said to Jim made everyone else laugh when, after he was done telling yet another one of his attention grabbing stories, I simply said, "You don't know a thing!"
"And we become these human jukeboxes, spilling out these anecdotes."
--Six Degrees of Separation

2005.08.07


archinecters@theEncantadas.sex

"Why am I suddenly thinking of cucumber slices, caviar and Sociables crackers?"

2005.08.07




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Stephen Lauf © 2024.08.07