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<< < Page 16
of 97
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Esopus Magazine
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Image by Bob Irey, Esopus 16 (Spring 2011)
After being transferred to a furniture chain’s suburban location, night manager Bob Irey dealt with his boredom by creating a series of drawings on sticky notes using only highlighters, White-Out, ballpoint pen, and pencil. We reproduce 36 of Irey's tiny, dynamic drawings in the issue.
Originally from Omaha, NE, Bob Irey was heavily involved in the punk movements in Chicago and Austin, TX, as an experimental musician in the late ’70s and early ’80s. Irey, who now resides in San Francisco, CA, is currently a furniture night manager for the retail chain Crate & Barrel, where he has worked for the past 25 years.
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Esopus is a twice-yearly arts magazine featuring fresh, unmediated perspectives on contemporary culture from a wide range of creative professionals. It includes artists’ projects, critical writing, fiction, poetry, visual essays, interviews, and, in each issue, an audio CD.
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Link,
Posted
by Nathan Krämer
on 8/13/2012
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Habitat for Humanity-Omaha ReStore
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1003 South 24th St
Omaha, NE 68108
Monday-Saturday: 9 am - 5 pm
Sunday: Closed
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The Habitat Omaha ReStore opened its doors in 2000 and has been selling building materials and home fixtures at prices 50 to 70 percent lower than their retail cost ever since. The ReStore is open to the public and is proud to offer an affordable and eco-friendly way for those living in and around the Omaha area to purchase quality new and used home maintenance and building supplies.
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Link,
Posted
by Nathan Krämer
on 7/30/2012
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Art
Posted
by Nathan Krämer
on 7/26/2012
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Omaha Publications & Best of Omaha
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Publishers of Omaha Magazine, Omaha Home, Gala, B2B Omaha, The Encounter, Her Living Magazine, Physicians Bulletin, Family Spectrum, and Offutt Beaten Path.
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Posted
by Nathan Krämer
on 7/3/2012
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Nebraska Home Appliance
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Nebraska Home Appliance Service & Parts
310 South 72nd Street
Omaha, Nebraska
402-399-0202
(This is just two blocks south of Dodge Street, on the west side of the street, between Firestone and Red Lobster.)
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Posted
by Nathan Krämer
on 5/1/2012
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Garden
Posted
by Nathan Krämer
on 5/1/2012
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Posted
by Nathan Krämer
on 4/30/2012
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Reinhold Marxhausen Blog
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Seward artist Reinhold Marxhausen Died April 22, 2011
Reinhold Marxhausen, an inventive artist whose sound sculptures landed him on late-night television and who has two mosaics in the Nebraska Capitol, died Saturday. He was 89.
Born in Minnesota and a veteran of World War II, Marxhausen moved to Seward in 1951 to be the first art teacher at what was then Concordia College. He taught there for 40 years, but he was far more than a professor.
"It's hard to put one thing down," said his wife, Dorris. "This is his diversity. I wouldn't want him being called only an art professor. He was happiest when he was exploring a new medium. The two Great Hall murals in the Capitol were significant. That was a competition. He was the only Nebraskan of the five artists that participated in all that."
Marxhausen had only done murals for an elementary school when he was selected in 1965 to create two of the six mosaic murals in the Capitol.
"He did a lot of stuff that was photography, but you wouldn't call him a photographer," son Paul said. "He did sculpture, but he wasn't a sculptor. He made murals, but he wasn't just a muralist. He was an artist. I think, more than anything else, it was teaching others to see the art in the world."
Marxhausen got his widest exposure when he appeared on "Late Night with David Letterman" in 1986, demonstrating his Star Dust moon rocks -- palm-sized stainless steel objects made to look like rocks but with wires inside that created a symphony of sound. His work was included in nearly every national exhibition of sound-related art in the 1980s.
Marxhausen considered the Capitol murals his proudest accomplishment. In addition to those, he has murals in Lincoln Southeast High School, at a Seward bank and at Lutheran churches throughout Nebraska. He also created major work for the headquarters of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod in St. Louis.
At a 1987 tribute banquet held in his honor, Marxhausen said he wasn't sure there even was art in Nebraska when he moved to Seward.
"Being here became a challenge, and I just think everything I did here was innovative," he said then. "I had to be innovative in order to get people to notice. You have to be nontraditional."
While others are remembering Marxhausen for his art and his contributions to Concordia, where the art gallery is named in his honor, son Karl had different memories when he signed the funeral home guest book.
"I wrote, ‘I remember when my dad built a sandbox for me and went on walks with his boys on Plum Creek out in nature.' People are looking at the bigger picture. I work in the school system, and I see kids that don't have dads. I had a dad. I had a stay-at-home mom and a dad."
Dorris Marxhausen said her husband began to get forgetful in about 1994 and later was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease.
"It's been a darned long time since he was capable of producing anything," she said.
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Posted
by Nathan Krämer
on 4/18/2012
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Posted
by Nathan Krämer
on 3/28/2012
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Steampunk
Posted
by Nathan Krämer
on 3/16/2012
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