| this image as on Google Streetview |
| this image and the next five courtesy of Serflac, from his video in the documentation |
Jose Luis Romero
La Casa Carmen de los Arrayanes
8 Calla Larga, 41610 Paradas, Sevilla, Spain
visitors welcome on appointmentan inventory and documentary of art environments in Europe created by non-professionals
| this image as on Google Streetview |
| this image and the next five courtesy of Serflac, from his video in the documentation |
Jose Luis Romero
La Casa Carmen de los Arrayanes
8 Calla Larga, 41610 Paradas, Sevilla, Spain
visitors welcome on appointment| all pictures in this post are screenprints from the video in the documentation |
The shell-decorated house in this post is located in Albuñuelas, a small village of around 800 inhabitants (2024) in the province of Granada, situated near the coast in southern Spain.
These decorations were created by Francisco Palma Jimenez. born in 1933.Life and works
The village's economy is primarily focused on citrus fruit cultivation, and young Francisco quickly became involved with the locals working in this branch of agriculture.
As a result, his time at school was limited to just a few months, and he had to learn to read and write largely on his own.
There was, of course, a practical reason for covering the house walls with shells, as it eliminated the need to re-whitewash them every year.
But more than this practical consideration, there was Francisco's artistic need to decorate his house beautifully.
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| images are screenprints from a video by Serflac on YouTube |
In the municipality of Dílar in Andalusia, Spain, there is in the front yard of a residential house a modest art environment named Casa de las Piedras (House of Stones).
The internet has some articles that refer to this creation, but none of these mentions the name of the one who made it, like there is also no information about the date this art environment came about.
However, the website of SPACES Archive has the name of the one who created this art environment and a series of pictures of the site by Jo Farb Hernandez, but these images are not accompanied by a review.
So, relying on the information mentioned in the documentation, here is a brief description of the various components that shape this art environment.
| this image and the next six are (2021) screenprints from the video in the documentations, published here in agreement with MSL |
Life and works
Jori Tapio Kaliola was born in 1968 in the town of Rauma, which is located in south-west Finland, near the Gulf of Bothnia.
At the age of seventeen, in 1985, he entered the music world as a self-taught singer and musician, performing as a soloist in various groups and bands.
He moved to Helsinki, where he got a job as a park warden. He married and the family had two children.
Life in the big city didn't suit him very much, and when he was in his mid-forties, he moved with his family to Hanko, a small town of about 7,700 inhabitants, located near the Baltic Sea in the south-westernmost tip of Finland.
Apart from tree trunks Kalliola uses recycled materials in his work, such as old stage walls, cupboard doors and scrap metal. The paint he uses comes from hardware stores.
| Kalliola in his atelier (2021) in Hanko_ above image by Veli Grano as on the article on the website of MSL in the documentation, published here in agreement with MSL |
| images are screenprints from the video in the documentation |
| all pictures courtesy of Sophie Lepetit see Documentation |
| another decorated house |
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| images are screenprints from the video in the docmentation |
A collection of miniature creations can be seen as an art environment on a smaller scale, as is the case, for example, with the collection of miniature vehicles that Willem van Genk -from the Netherlands- had brought together in his home.
The following post addresses a similar situation, albeit one involving a collection of fairground attractions in miniature, handcrafted and assembled by Bert van Houten, also from the Netherlands.
Bert van Houten wasn't just fascinated by creating miniature amusement rides, he was also interested in the fair itself.
So for many years he was vice-chairman of the fondation for Kermis Cultuur in Nederland.(Fair Culture in the Netherlands).
With his miniature attractions he was a regular guest at the renowned Dutch fair in Tilnurg, a town in the south of the Netherlands. The fair was the largest in the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg (Benelux).
When Bert van Houten in 2016 approached the age of 75, he announced his intention to retire from the fairground industry.
Van Houten's creations were not only on display at the Tilburg fair, but were also regularly exhibited in nursing homes, often accompanied by gatherings for residents featuring singing and music.
The residents of these homes found these gatherings a fond memory of times gone by and the appreciation Bert van Houren received was the crowning glory of his work.
Video