Zoobie: It's A Plushy, It's A Pillow, It's A Blanket
The big summer travel season is upon us. If you are fortunate enough to be able to head out with your kids on vacation this year you really should check out Ping the Panda Zoobie. He makes a great little travel companion.
Ping the Panda Zoobie - $31.95
This little guy can be played with as a stuffed animal.
You can unhook him and use him as a pillow.
Or you can unzip him, pull his guts out and use him as a super cozy blanket. The blanket does completely unzip from the little guy for easy washing.
Yep, it's a plush toy, pillow, and blanket rolled into one. This kid size Zoobie has a pretty decent sized blanket. I would venture to say it's comparable in size to any in-flight blanket you might purchase, but a whole lot softer.
This great little item is now available at the Neatoshop. More styles and Baby Zoobie are also available.
The Zoobie collection is just one of the new kids lines being carried by the Neatoshop. Be sure to check back regularly as we are in the process of expanding the Neatoshop's kid and baby line.
Link
Ping the Panda Zoobie - $31.95
This little guy can be played with as a stuffed animal.
You can unhook him and use him as a pillow.
Or you can unzip him, pull his guts out and use him as a super cozy blanket. The blanket does completely unzip from the little guy for easy washing.
Yep, it's a plush toy, pillow, and blanket rolled into one. This kid size Zoobie has a pretty decent sized blanket. I would venture to say it's comparable in size to any in-flight blanket you might purchase, but a whole lot softer.
This great little item is now available at the Neatoshop. More styles and Baby Zoobie are also available.
The Zoobie collection is just one of the new kids lines being carried by the Neatoshop. Be sure to check back regularly as we are in the process of expanding the Neatoshop's kid and baby line.
Link
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Comments (0)
"...Fascinating....! ...Ahmmmmmmmm....,very interesting to observe that this piece truly makes the mind go into overdrive...."
From that point on I can go in several directions, most of them just as vague as the opening line. And as far as most modern art goes that is how I prefer to keep it for those who do not know me...
Another "lie to get laid" tutorial!
Oh yeah, the "eventual" challenge of getting caught hardly never happens since everyone in the room is also bluffing.
Personal experience - I've had people tell me that I "dont get it" referring to a work in a show that, unbeknownst to them, I created :D Another person told me to stick with cartoons and let the people who know what theyre talking about enjoy the show. I didnt say anything because I was quietly enjoying the whole situation but a friend of mine couldnt resist and filled them in. I just smiled from across the room
Then redirect the conversation to drinks and get the heck out of there.
Case in point. MCA in Chicago. The current exhibition on the main floor has one room where a fan is tethered by a cable to the ceiling. Like an upright caged standing fan, except it has no base and hangs from a cord. It is powered on and swoops and flutters about while anchored to the ceiling.
I took a long look at it, people walking around me. Some others curiously standing in the room and pondering.
I just blurted out. "This is the stupidest fucking thing I have ever seen called art."
Two people looked upset at me, everyone else clapped.
Unfortunately... there were worse examples in the other rooms. So that ceiling fan is no longer _the_ stupidest, but among the most stupid things I've ever seen installed and called art.
June 9th, 2009 at 8:22 am
james - did you like anything by him (Eliasson)?"
While I found some of the setups to be incredibly elementary, the tunnel of polarized shards of glass (One Way Colour Tunnel) was nice. Two other pieces that you'll find on the MCA Chicago website look better photographed than they did in person. (Beauty (a fine mist sprinkler hanging from the ceiling with a light aimed at it) and Color Space Embracer (more polarized glass with a light aimed at it))...
If the photgraphs were printed and hung, I probably would have been more impressed with what I saw. The shots were very well composed and framed. It was funny in that way. So I tend to stand by the statement that Art is the Experience on top of what is done. But seeing the caged fan dangling from the ceiling was just so dumb that I couldn't justify it at all.
One of the other bits in the exhibit was called Mirror Doors. 4 spot lamps aimed at the floor or wall with a mirror completing the shape if you looked at it from a certain angle. One was just simply aimed at the floor.
Considering I've worked in the arts, both theater and institutions... I found a lot of the installations to be so pedestrian and insulting. Aiming a light at the floor? Come on.
Eliasson certainly, for myself, carries the distinction to have among the most "extreme" works in a single installation that I have seen: Some -really- nice setups (The Photographic series, very nice) and the most DUMB things I've ever seen (mentioned above)... So yeah. Certainly hit both ends of the scale for me.
Mind you, I'm a fan of Duchamp and his readymade works. I thought tipping a urinal over and calling it Fountain is hysterical... (Especially when you notice it's also sacrilegious, the vague shape of the Virgin Mary), but there's so much more to say about things like that and a bicycle wheel mounted to a stool than there could have been said about...
A caged fan hung from the ceiling or a spotlight aimed at the floor.
When I first read your description of the fan tethered to the ceiling and flailing about, I was thinking of an actual fan of the arts, as in fan-club aficionado. Now that would have been art. Or at least funny.