Of Things In General

Any chance of some closeup shots, Oswaldo? Everything looks great from afar, but with curiosity piqued, even a few details would be cool. (Les Paul, maps, Venini's, drawings? Etc.......)
 
At the risk of overstaying my welcome, here are some not very good closeups (some, Im afraid, made just by cropping).

The two coffee tables next to the painting:
xTables.jpg
The four taekwondo boards matched with the four line drawings, separated by the Venini vases:
xtwd.jpg
The Venini tessuto vases designed by Carlo Scarpa. The one in the middle is glossy, the others matte.
xVeniniTessuto.jpg
The Venini pioggia vases, designed by Ginette Venini, next to an Iran do Espirito Santo drawing made with ruler and pen:
xVeniniPioggias.jpg
Honeycomb wall shelf with the madeleine antiques:
xAntiques.jpg
Two more Venini vases over the Lucio Fontana study for a Venini door, both next to political works by Cildo Meireles:
xFontana.jpg
Grandfather memorabilia section:
xGrandfather.jpg
Engraved postage stamps from the Empire period (horrible picture):
xStamps.jpg
Sculptures by Mestre Nino, a renowned popular artist:
xMestreNino.jpg
The finely designed maps denouncing supposed atrocities against North Vietnam:
xMaps.jpg
A collection, from the 1970s, of sociology and philosophy books, all sharing the same cover design by Antonio Lizrraga (not to worry, I will set them free after the show):
xLivros.jpg
My most capricious curatorial moment, the juxtaposing of three radically different artists because of a thematic recurrence:
xCircles.jpg
Finally, by request, the Les Paul:
xLesPaul.jpg
 
Everything in that show is an axe man!

Oswaldo, this is a delight! The closer we get, the more it opens up. Thanks...and uhm feel free to uhm show us more. You have an eye. And this is fun to get more intimate with the work.
 
The objects are all extensively sulfured, so there's nothing a priori that would prevent any of them from being borrowed, or entire shows from travelling, but a worthwhile institution would have to request/invite, and international art travel, with couriers, etc., is an expensive proposition. So, for the time being, the collection seems destined to be local.
 
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