1062
Philosophy on wheels
Marcus Bridge, Norwegian artist, decided that art should generate continuous positive and benefit society. A little bit bothering, he built a mock-up of the head and tail of a dinosaur, attached to his tricycle and riding on his "homegrown" in the city. Attention to his undertaking, of course, enormous, so gradually, and learned about the Norse world.
He created the dinosaur is not for fun, otherwise the project was "one of ...". And so it is a whole philosophy on wheels.
It was my protest against dogmatic Creek parenting. There is a movement, theme parks, where children show that nature is one and playfully show that children and dinosaurs should be friends. I went on: let the dinosaurs live between us, with us. This bike is designed for trips to biblical sites in Norway. I would like to, you know, upset the established order of things and posmuschat mind hardcore Catholics and Lutherans.
I cut the head of the lizard from expanded polystyrene, an ordinary knife. Covered it with epoxy glue, then coated fiberglass, and painted bright orange, brown, golden-red flowers. Details such as dripping saliva, glittering in the sunlight teeth just added realism.
He created the dinosaur is not for fun, otherwise the project was "one of ...". And so it is a whole philosophy on wheels.
It was my protest against dogmatic Creek parenting. There is a movement, theme parks, where children show that nature is one and playfully show that children and dinosaurs should be friends. I went on: let the dinosaurs live between us, with us. This bike is designed for trips to biblical sites in Norway. I would like to, you know, upset the established order of things and posmuschat mind hardcore Catholics and Lutherans.
I cut the head of the lizard from expanded polystyrene, an ordinary knife. Covered it with epoxy glue, then coated fiberglass, and painted bright orange, brown, golden-red flowers. Details such as dripping saliva, glittering in the sunlight teeth just added realism.