Archive for the 'Florida' Category

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What I’m reading.


Flo Joe at Miami’s Marine Stadium. (All images courtesy of James and Karla Murray.)

By now, graffiti in cities like New York and L.A. and London and Berlin has been copiously documented. Which is why it was such a treat to pick up James and Karla Murray’s Miami Graffiti, which offers a broad survey of what’s been going down on that narrow strip of concrete that sits at the edge of the Everglades. Miami’s intense sunlight and weather seem to inspire a hyper-bright tropical color palette among its artists, and the Murrays do a good job of documenting it. The book covers everything from legal walls to abandoned industrial sites to transportation overpasses.

My favorite shots, however, are the ones that incorporate a broad view of the architecture, and truly reflect the ways in which graffiti artists play off of specific structural environments. The image of the giant tag by Flo Joe, at Miami’s stunning Marine Stadium (above), an abandoned Modernist boat racing viewing stand built in 1963, is a prime example.

The Murrays have been assiduously documenting graffiti since the ’90s and have thousands of images from New York, Miami and beyond, which have been published in various tomes. I’d like to suggest the topic of their next book: one that focuses exclusively on the way that graffiti interacts with architecture. I’ll be the first geek in line to buy it.

Miami Graffiti hits bookstores this month.


Junk and Rekal, at an old industrial site in Miami.

Nature break.


A great blue heron hangs out in the coastal marshes that border the town of Inlet, in the Florida panhandle. (Photo by C-M.)

The Digest. 03.11.09.


Halo, Las Olas Blvd., Ft. Lauderdale, Fl., 2007 by Francie Bishop Good. (Image courtesy of Francie Bishop Good.)

So Many Columns, So Little Time: The narchitecture of the Florida panhandle.


’80s-style Spanish Mediterranean + ginormous columns + fugly color palette = Narchitecture. (Photos by C-M.) 

If narchitecture is architecture that looks as if it were commissioned by drug traffickers, then the narchitecture of northwest Florida would appear to have been devised by their thuggish suburban cousins. This thriving regional school of design takes narchitectural staples, such as Italianate balustrades and Classical columns, and showcases them against a backdrop of oversized structures that scream ‘stuccoed Mediterranean citadel’ and ‘psycho homeowners association’ — all at the same time. Not to mention the colors: a rainbow of shades that are drawn straight from the polo shirt selection at Abercrombie & Fitch. What’s most intriguing about these McManses, however, is their voluminous scale, intended to make the average late model Denali look downright puny. The best part? All of the structures shown here are actually simple beach “cottages.”

Click on image to supersize. Many more after the jump.

Continue reading ‘So Many Columns, So Little Time: The narchitecture of the Florida panhandle.’

The Digest. 10.13.08.


The Waffle Stop in Sarasota, Florida: Elvis ate here in 1956…and had three eggs, two orders of toast, three strips of bacon, pan fried potatoes and three glasses of milk. (Photo by C-M.)

The Day in Campaign Shrubbery.


Orlando, October 2008. Now who’s got weed killer? (Thanks to Central Florida correspondent, Indian River Fruit Lady, for the sublime ridiculosity.)

Nature break. Everglades Edition.

Locusts mating
What I’ve seen today: a red-shouldered hawk eating a snake, a turtle sunbathing, two locusts mating, ‘gators snoozing, turkey buzzards riding the wind currents, a rat snake hunting, and I got bit on the lip by an absolutely ferocious mosquito. Can’t wait to do it all again tomorrow. (Photo by C-M.)

Architecture: The Futuro House in Pensacola Beach, Fla.

Futuro House in Pensacola Beach
My ship has come: the Futuro House, in Pensacola Beach, Fla. More here. (Photo by C-M.)

Florida: Better than Matthew Barney.

amazing
If only the director of the Cremaster Cycle had thought to come up with something as good as this: a plaster statue madeover by seashells and a glue gun. And don’t forget the blowfish. (Photo by C-M.)

The Digest. 09.03.08. On-the-road edition.

Micanopy Fl
Micanopy. (Photo by C-M.)

Hey Folks: Had an unexpected window of free time, so here’s a little Digest for y’all, straight from the wilds of Florida. xox, C.