Tiki Central / General Tiki
Urban Archeology
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Ojaitimo
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Sun, Dec 24, 2006 3:59 PM
Hey there fellow TCers Its a big world and I'd like to see more places than I could ever hope of traveling to. Thats where many of you with your pictures posted of places we will never travel to are one of the best things about TC nd Critiki. With over 5300 TC members, I'm sure we can cover most of the world. I would like to see more photos on TC & Critiki of memorbilia and locations. Come on everyone, cut loose with those pictures. Most of you have a digital camera, even cell phone cameras and I would really like to see more posts with photographs such as the Korean DMZ thread. Several of you had those great shots you added to an already great post. Many of the rest of you could take pictures and post them on TC if you realized how simple it can be especially with Windows XP. Please PM me if you need help and I will be happy to guide you through it. Ojaitimo Tim Added on February 22, 2007, Someone recently said this to me after reading this thread, Ar ar•che•ol•o•gy The science of, or a treatise on, first principles n. [ Edited by: Ojaitimo 2007-02-22 21:30 ] |
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Ojaitimo
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Sat, Dec 30, 2006 1:08 AM
Here for example, Urban Archeology at the risk of getting shot. Not that I'm asking any of you to do this. (Don't try this at home) The owner let me roam around while I took pictures but wouldn't come out or show him self. It's at the Hole in the Wall welding yard 10 miles outside of Palm Springs. You can't miss it as it is the only place with a 20 foot high spider out front with the tiki and other stuff. Is it tiki? I'll let you be the judge. I want to see how this place progresses so I plan to return this spring and hope to meet the artist without getting shot. [ Edited by: Ojaitimo 2006-12-30 01:18 ] |
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bigbrotiki
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Sat, Dec 30, 2006 6:12 AM
While this is not fully Tiki, but more "outsider art" or "roadside art", often these kind of environments have Tiki-like elements. There could also be a thread on "Tikis in strange places" But I want to support Tim's call to urban archeology. I often regret not having photographed some Tiki sites because I felt they had been compromised too much by renovation. But it is those kind of images that tell an important part of the story of Tiki's rise and fall. And without the "fall" part, Tiki's history would only be half as interesting. The challenge to find angles and perspectives on "devolved" Tiki locales that give you an image that is symbolic of the downfall is much more difficult to meet, of course, than photographing still existent Tiki palaces. I am very self-critical, and fear that too often I have not photographed at all, using the "not good enough to be published" criterium, but once a place is going down, it's going-gone! real fast and won't come back. |
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hiltiki
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Sat, Dec 30, 2006 6:36 AM
Ojaitimo thanks for the great pictures. It almost looks like a place out of a David Lynch movie. The carved tiki heads almost look decomposed. I agree with Bigbrotiki as this being Roadside art, and many times I find myself not taking pictures of sights and buildings and etc. thinking it is not tiki enough or I think I will do it next time.. I pass by the same places all the time and then it is gone. For example the Aku Aku Motel on Ventura Blvd, in Woodland Hills. So many times I wanted to take pictures of the place to show what it looks like now. Last time I passed by a month ago all the tiki aspects were taken down and it is being reconstructed into a regular looking Motel. No more Aku Aku Motel, it is a shame. |
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Gigantalope
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Sat, Dec 30, 2006 8:04 AM
Ojaitimo, great work! I have had welding done by that guy in the '70s that's been there forever (as you can tell by some of plants) That place needed to be chronicled...fine work! |
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Tom Slick
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Sat, Dec 30, 2006 9:30 AM
Great job Tim, I too enjoy good old fashioned roadside eccentric art! These pics have alot of "Von Dutchism" to them, as he was a recluse and eccentric man who always kept a gun "at arms length", but his artwork was and still is incredible. It also reminds of Simon Rodia's Watts Towers in South Central Los Angeles, which coincedently, Von Dutch used to bring old,broken plates and cups along with old worn silverware from the local restaurants and trashbins to Simon Rodia when he was building the towers. Ken Howard a.k.a. "Von Dutch" was "touched" by art at an early age. |
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Ojaitimo
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Tue, Jan 9, 2007 11:22 AM
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Ojaitimo
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Wed, Jan 10, 2007 9:36 AM
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GreenWoman
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Sat, Jan 13, 2007 11:07 AM
I think this is the right forum for this. %-) I'm posting this for a friend. Though I don't have any photos and couldn't find anything further on the internet, I thought you would enjoy this story. ~ ~ ~ It took me another ride to figure out that the bench other than rising ~ ~ ~ Has anyone ever heard of this tiki ride? GreenWoman, who promised to tell my friend if anyone replied. %-) |
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Ojaitimo
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Mon, Jan 15, 2007 11:31 AM
This sounds like a cool ride. There was a tiki island off the Santa Monica pier in California that may have had something like it. Does anyone else know? The boardwalk you mentioned is still going since 1927. I would like to see a picture myself. Thanks for your friends story Green Woman. |
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Ojaitimo
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Sat, Jan 20, 2007 10:29 AM
The new thread about Trader Vic's in general yesterday points out how important urban archeology is for all of us and our childrens children. All the world is a stage and all men and women merely players, they have their entrances and exits and one man in his life plays many parts. William Shakespere Life is a state of mind [ Edited by: Ojaitimo 2007-01-20 10:55 ] |
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GatorRob
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Sun, Jan 21, 2007 12:40 PM
I'll second that. Once a place is gone, it's gone forever. Pictures cannot make up for that, but it can help to document these places we love so they are not forgotten. Also, please put the pictures you take in the Locating Tiki forum under the appropriate thread. This makes it MUCH easier to find the pictures in the years to come. I applaud Ojaitimo and Swanky for their recent efforts to boost the photo content in that forum. I recently posted a number of pictures from TV Atlanta in there and will do my part to continue adding to it as I visit other places. |
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Ojaitimo
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Tue, Feb 20, 2007 3:12 PM
This top photograph was taken in Santa Barbara in 1901 of Geneva Caldwell. A young woman who was probably into tiki. She moved to the Phillipines with her fellow teacher husband. [ Edited by: Ojaitimo 2007-02-20 15:19 ] |
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VampiressRN
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Tue, Feb 20, 2007 4:07 PM
I love looking at old photos like that of women. I want to just yell at them "let your hair down, cut the sleeves/neck/length off that dress, burn your corsette, and sport those lace-up boots...get wild woman and go to the local bar for a rally with the rest of us girls"!!! |
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Ojaitimo
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Wed, Feb 21, 2007 8:06 AM
Vampiress, This post is another appeal to all of you with your images. I'm not sure why but getting pictures is like hens teeth. [ Edited by: Ojaitimo 2007-02-22 09:22 ] |
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Ojaitimo
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Mon, Mar 26, 2007 6:40 PM
I ended up getting filthy while exploring this place on my way to Trader Vic's for the TC to Save TV 90210 gathering on Saint Patty's day. I spotted this property on Topanga Canyon and the Pacific Coast Highway that is being reclaimed by state for the Santa Monica park. The property is currently abandoned and waiting to be torn down. I entered the area and explored the old houses you see here that have not been lived in for some time. [ [ Edited by: Ojaitimo 2007-03-26 19:00 ] |
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PockyTiki
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Mon, Mar 26, 2007 7:18 PM
I believe in that last post on the first page the woman's name is "Edna". In "proper" cursive, the letter "M" is written down with 3 humps, not 2. The letter "N" is the one with 2 humps. Don't take my word on it though, I hate writing in cursive...it's very confining. |
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TIKIBOSKO
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Mon, Mar 26, 2007 8:28 PM
“I think that the previous resident might have been into tiki judging from the rubber tree, palm tree and this tray that I found. Does anyone know the age of these trees?” Canary Islands date palms are one of the few palms that can self propagate in Southern California so that isn’t an indicator of Tiki and it looks to be 15 or so years old, unless the trunk goes way out of the frame where I can't see. As well as the ficus elastica a very common house plant, mature trees get huge around here and there are some giants in San Diego county the one pictured doesn’t look too old? Better luck next time. Bosko |
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Rev. Griz
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Tue, Mar 27, 2007 12:01 PM
The concept of "Urban Archeology" makes me wonder what my great grandchildren will mourn the loss of from the dim past of their great-grandfather? Tiki and Space Age give me a sense of nostalgia because I was in and around it so much when I was a young child and never paid attention to it, but once I was grown up and noticed that it was going away I started to miss it. My youngest grandkid is five, and the high point of his week is to come over to Papa's house (that's me!) for Tiki Lounge every Sunday afternoon. What is there in this world now that we oldsters consider mundane and artificial that will make him nostalgic in the Sundown days of his life? I can't think of much of anything modern that I wouldn't give up to have Harbor Boulevard all lit up in neon Googie again. |
Pages: 1 18 replies