Showing posts with label cincinnati. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cincinnati. Show all posts


On our drive down to Nashville, my friend and I stopped in Cincinnati for a bite at Ollie's Trolley right off I-75 and a quick tour of Over the Rhine. I was interested to see the ways that someone (the OTR Foundation? The Cincinnati Preservation Assoc.) had painted the doors and windows of many of the abandoned structures bright colors. We made slight detour to visit The Hole (I wrote about it here) and saw that some of doors and windows had been painted there as well.

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West End, Cincinnati

Posted by jdg | 10:36 AM | , ,





When we went past these two tenements, my daughter said, "Man, one of those definitely has a ghost."


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"Great Sign" , "Dude"

Posted by jdg | 10:29 AM | ,






While you get five bonus points for extending the tail of the G into a swirling heap of dog turd, it's completely offset by your use of unnecessary quotation marks.

Seen in Northside, Cincinnati.


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We're just back from spending the week in Cincinnati. Again, what a beautiful city. On Tuesday the kids and I spent the afternoon at the incredible Children's Museum underneath the awe-inspiring train station, and it was with some melancholy that I considered how well the city and preserved this landmark and found such a great use for the expansive spaces, and how poorly Detroit's similarly beautiful structure has fared.

So I'm trying to get the pictures on this part of the site to appear larger; if things look strange to you, please let me know and I'll try to fix it (sweetjuniper at gmail.com).

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We killed some time hanging out in the lobby of Zaha Hadid's Contemporary Art Center in Cincinnati. Because it was warm there.


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I've walked around Over the Rhine a few times now, and every time I see kids like this just walking around by themselves, maybe on their home from school, all of them with their own agendas. This little one was just so small.

But just a quick note to some of the older kids: my name is not "white boy." Next time you want my attention, be more specific, like your colleague who called out, "Hey white boy with the crazy hat." Thank you.

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This mural just on the edge of downtown Cincinnati features a trompe l'Oeil effect to look like a Roman temple built into the side of an old building. The artist was Robert Haas, and I was lucky enough to be walking past it on a snowy night after dinner on Vine Street.

Cincinnatus was one of the most legendary politicians of the early Roman Republic. He is most famous for the way he took up the mantle of dictator to defeat the Aequi, supposedly recruited from behind the plow on his modest farm and then relinquishing the fasces and returning to his plow immediately after the defeat of the Aequi. This act was held by staunch Republicans in the later Republic as a model for responsible and modest leadership in an increasingly competitive society, and obviously in stark contrast to the ambitions of men like Julius Caesar. The spectre of Cincinnatus is what compelled later dictators like Sulla to voluntarily step down.

The city of Cincinnati was named after a society of that name which honored George Washington as a contemporary model of this virtue.


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If the angles in this photo seem a little weird, it's because they are. This is artist Allan Wexler's "hypar room," with a floor built to the shape of a "hyperbolic paraboloid" at the Unmuseum of the Cincinnati Contemporary Art Center. It was a lot of fun watching the kids trying to navigate this space, particularly Mr. Confident Crawler here.

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