Plains Hotel. Photo from Leader-Post.
http://www.leaderpost.com/Plains+Hotel+finally+coming+down/5796600/story.html

Plains Hotel. Photo from Leader-Post.
http://www.leaderpost.com/Plains+Hotel+finally+coming+down/5796600/story.html
charcoal, chalk · toned paper · 16" x 10" · 2011
I have no idea. Random image from Google image search.
My life for the last few years has been coding and maintaining the various SaskPower web properties. A selection of which are below.

Clean Coal mini site. No longer up.

Shand Greenhouse was coded and maintained using a CMS called RedDot. If you want me to code for RedDot, I’ll walk. Seriously. Worst piece of junk I’ve ever had to use. I’m surprised the site doesn’t crash.

Seedling Application: flash app allows users to fill out form to receive seedlings. Large part of this was drawing application that allows users to show where they intend to use the trees. Coded by Corwin Derkatch.
Website for Daniel Johnson Architect Inc. and Garth Norbraten Architect Inc. Designed by the great and powerful Erik Norbraten.
Site is still live and kicking.
Logo designs, unused.
Pentti Sammallahti was born in 1950 in Helsinki, Finland. He began taking photographs at 11 and by 1971 he began to exhibit extensively in Finland and throughout the world.
Sammallahti describes himself as a nomad who enjoys the nature of the great north, the darkness, the cold, and the sea. Sammallahti is a master craftsman, carefully toning his prints, to create a poetic atmosphere of desolate silence. Sammallahti was honored to be included among the 100 favorite photographs in the personal collection of Henri Cartier-Bresson, which was the inaugural exhibition for the Foundation Henri Cartier-Bresson in 2003. Since 1979, Pentti Sammallahti has published thirteen books and portfolios and has received awards such as the Samuli Paulaharju Prize of the Finnish Literature Society, State Prizes for Photography, Uusimaa Province Art Prize, Daniel Nyblin Prize, and the Finnish Critics Association Annual.
Nice collection of images on Google+.
via: Eugene Eugene
Not sure whatever happened to these guys. I really dug the hell outta them for the longest time. At the time, I didn’t realize how much they sound like something Jack White would do.
I spent a great deal of my life being ignored. I was always very happy that way. Being ignored is a great privilege. That is how I think I learnt to see what others do not see and to react to situations differently. I simply looked at the world, not really prepared for anything.”
—Saul Leiter
More info at Lens Culture and some pics on Google+: Part 1 | Part 2.
via: Eugene Eugene