Kolona Harbour at Night ©2024 blueskipper
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Kolona Harbour at Night ©2024 blueskipper

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
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Με το μικρόφωνο ανοιχτό..
Δε θα μετάνιωνε κανείς για την αγάπη αυτή
berlin 2020

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
What goes up must come down. Sometimes what comes down must be carefully organized and housed for long-term art storage. This is the case for the artist Do Ho Suh’s The Perfect Home II. This large-scale installation by Korean-born artist Do Ho Suh was installed in the Museum’s Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Gallery from October 12, 2018–May 5, 2019. The Perfect Home II is a full-scale re-creation of the artist’s former apartment in the Chelsea neighborhood of New York City.
The metal rods, connectors and nylon fabric arrived to the museum without installation plans or adequate long-term storage. Members of the Conservation and Collections staff measured and logged all of the rod lengths and locations into an Excel document.
During the installation, a storage system was designed and constructed for the rods. The over 1000 aluminum rods, which comprise the piece’s monumental substructure and the apartments appliances, vary greatly in length from 50mm (2”) up to 2708mm (109”/9’). Fourteen 8’ x 2’ sheets of paper-lined ½” thick Tycore panels were prepared as bases and lids for rod storage. To further strengthen the Tycore bases five 4” x 24” wide pieces of paper-lined Tycore were adhered with PVA across the bottom of each base. Then the bases were gridded off with 1” wide ethafoam strips adhered with hot glue to store five or six rods per section. 2” wide dense cotton strap with Velcro strips at each end were created to attach the bases and lids.
During the de-installation process accession numbers were attached to each rod. The numbers identify the piece’s overall designation (2017.46.), it’s location in the apartment: such as corridor roof or apartment floor or kitchen appliance/refrigerator, and finally a letter to correlate with the rod’s exact length.
Now with clear installation plans, accession number identification and proper storage this magnificent work is ready for installation by the Museum’s Conservation and Collections staff for generations to come.
Posted by Keith DuQuette, Conservation Specialist
Tony Stark: I see a suit of armor around the world. -age of ultron
He may have failed to get a suit around the world.
But at least he put a suit around his world!