Ladyspeed6
Member
- :
- 2006 Mazdaspeed6
I got this email today! In case you haven't seen it...
When the dust gets thick on the back window of his Mini Cooper, Scott
Wade
uses it as a canvas to create temporary works of art. Among his
creations
was a copy of C.M. Coolidge's 'A Friend in Need,' better known as dogs
playing poker.
Wade used his finger and other implements to etch this homage to
Vincent
Van Gogh's 'Starry Night' and Leonardo da Vinci's 'Mona Lisa.' Wade
lives
off the unpaved Roadrunner Road north of San Marcos, which dusts the
back
windows of his car and gives him the canvases to create his own works of
art. A portrait of Kinky Friedman on the back of the Mazda driven by
Wade's
wife, Robin Wood, was featured on the gubernatorial candidate's Web
site.
A collage of wildlife decorates the Mini Cooper's window.
Wade's creations attract admirers wherever he goes. Who needs a
frost-covered window when you've got road dust to create a Christmas
scene?
A gimme-capped John Kelso was the subject of one window portrait.
Besides
his finger, Wade uses traditional art tools, such as paintbrushes, and
unconventional ones, like a chewed Popsicle stick, to make his
drawings.
Wade takes pride in his creations, but he knows that with one good
shower,
his work will just wash away.
When the dust gets thick on the back window of his Mini Cooper, Scott
Wade
uses it as a canvas to create temporary works of art. Among his
creations
was a copy of C.M. Coolidge's 'A Friend in Need,' better known as dogs
playing poker.
Wade used his finger and other implements to etch this homage to
Vincent
Van Gogh's 'Starry Night' and Leonardo da Vinci's 'Mona Lisa.' Wade
lives
off the unpaved Roadrunner Road north of San Marcos, which dusts the
back
windows of his car and gives him the canvases to create his own works of
art. A portrait of Kinky Friedman on the back of the Mazda driven by
Wade's
wife, Robin Wood, was featured on the gubernatorial candidate's Web
site.
A collage of wildlife decorates the Mini Cooper's window.
Wade's creations attract admirers wherever he goes. Who needs a
frost-covered window when you've got road dust to create a Christmas
scene?
A gimme-capped John Kelso was the subject of one window portrait.
Besides
his finger, Wade uses traditional art tools, such as paintbrushes, and
unconventional ones, like a chewed Popsicle stick, to make his
drawings.
Wade takes pride in his creations, but he knows that with one good
shower,
his work will just wash away.