March 26th, 2009
I cannot wait to hang this on my wall, where it’ll stay ‘til Kingdom come.

I just finished this commissioned piece for Tim.  It’s a visual interpretation of the ‘Fourth World’ concept  that Dave Eggers writes about in You Shall Know Our Velocity.  You can ask Tim to explain it.
The cow, however, comes into the picture as a tribute to Marc Chagall, who is one of my favorite artists.  Chagall was a Russian-born artist who split his time during WWI painting both Russia and France.  During the Nazi occupation of France during WWII, Chagall’s family sought refuge in the U.S.  Before coming to America, the only question that concerned Chagall was whether or not there were cows there.  Chagall had a special relationship with cows, and he knew that as long as he had cows to paint he could be happy anywhere.


Thanks Sarah.

I cannot wait to hang this on my wall, where it’ll stay ‘til Kingdom come.

I just finished this commissioned piece for Tim.  It’s a visual interpretation of the ‘Fourth World’ concept  that Dave Eggers writes about in You Shall Know Our Velocity.  You can ask Tim to explain it.

The cow, however, comes into the picture as a tribute to Marc Chagall, who is one of my favorite artists.  Chagall was a Russian-born artist who split his time during WWI painting both Russia and France.  During the Nazi occupation of France during WWII, Chagall’s family sought refuge in the U.S.  Before coming to America, the only question that concerned Chagall was whether or not there were cows there.  Chagall had a special relationship with cows, and he knew that as long as he had cows to paint he could be happy anywhere.

Thanks Sarah.

Reblogged from Dear Diary
  1. yym reblogged this from sarahachtemeier and added:
    wall, where it’ll stay ‘til Kingdom come.
  2. sarahachtemeier posted this

I Worked Here

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@edash

The sub-par, yet slowly improving missives of Tim Hackbarth, man about town in Austin, TX.

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