Tuesday, May 25, 2010
William Jolly Bridge with Plaster Teeth from Reverse Garbage
A string of photos while playing with the new camera. The plaster teeth came from Reverse Garbage in West End. This is from the drive back. The teeth ended up in a prep class room and inspired a dentist waiting area.
Sunday, May 23, 2010
Ghost Bumpers

I read that there are different versions of these that appear in different suburbs throughout Brisbane. This image was taken in Red Hill, I'll find some more and start comparing them to find out if this is correct.
Friday, May 21, 2010
Sunday, May 16, 2010
Ghosts in the Architecture
A few years back while researching the founding of Mandalay under King Mindon of Myanmar (early 1800's), I came across a reference regarding the foundations of the palace at Mandalay.
The story went that four pregnant women were murdered and buried at the four compass point entrances of the inner palace. The foetuses along with their scorned mothers were then expected to rise again as angry ghosts that would protect these entrances from those that were not permitted access. And this was a common practice by all accounts. Why these wronged spirits would want to help out those that wronged them is beyond me...
Apparently the practice had been banned by the good King Mindon but all soureces said that this did occur at Mandalay even though the Buddhist king renounced the practice. There was some skepticism in the sources too that said something about the King just looking good by outlawing the practice although noone in the their right mind during the late days of the court of the Burmese Kings would live somewhere without ghosts 'built in' to the architecture.
King Mindon's son Thibaw did a bit of work adding ghosts to the palace compound after Mindon's death. More on that grusome tale another time...
The story went that four pregnant women were murdered and buried at the four compass point entrances of the inner palace. The foetuses along with their scorned mothers were then expected to rise again as angry ghosts that would protect these entrances from those that were not permitted access. And this was a common practice by all accounts. Why these wronged spirits would want to help out those that wronged them is beyond me...
Apparently the practice had been banned by the good King Mindon but all soureces said that this did occur at Mandalay even though the Buddhist king renounced the practice. There was some skepticism in the sources too that said something about the King just looking good by outlawing the practice although noone in the their right mind during the late days of the court of the Burmese Kings would live somewhere without ghosts 'built in' to the architecture.
King Mindon's son Thibaw did a bit of work adding ghosts to the palace compound after Mindon's death. More on that grusome tale another time...
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
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