ID
|
160009
| |
Object
|
"Rex" the Toy Story dinosaur (fragment)
| |
Length
|
about 65mm
| |
Material
|
Plastic
| |
Provenance
|
Dallas, Texas
| |
Credit Line
|
The Museum of Parking Lot Junk
|
Saturday, May 14, 2016
Dinosaur "Rex"
"I did it! I finally defeated Zurg!"
Mystery Metal No. 1
This is my favorite type of parking lot junk. It had some purpose, but is a mystery now without context. The nut is welded to the metal plate, two holes at a jaunty angle. Things like this go into the Permanent Collection.
ID
|
160008
|
|
Object
|
Mystery Metal No. 1
|
|
Length
|
34mm
|
|
Material
|
Rubber
|
|
Provenance
|
Dallas,
Texas
|
|
Credit
Line
|
The
Museum of Parking Lot Junk
|
Flat spring
This spring has been flattened to the point where it can't be flattened anymore. Run it over with a truck and it will look the same. It's part of its environment now. There's a metaphor here somewhere.
ID
|
160007
|
|
Object
|
Flat spring
|
|
Length
|
48mm
|
|
Material
|
Metal
|
|
Provenance
|
Dallas,
Texas
|
|
Credit
Line
|
The
Museum of Parking Lot Junk
|
Monday, May 9, 2016
Sunglasses lens
If the people I know are any indication, sunglasses must be just about the most often misplaced or lost item owned by modern humans. The lenses, either because they're flat or because they're less brittle, tend to outlast the frames in parking lots. The other lens from this pair was about 20 feet away, but no frame pieces. I've considered picking these up as I find them and eventually making a stained glass piece.
ID
|
160006
|
|
Object
|
Sunglass lens
|
|
Length
|
57mm
|
|
Material
|
Plastic
|
|
Provenance
|
Dallas,
Texas
|
|
Credit
Line
|
The
Museum of Parking Lot Junk
|
Sunday, May 8, 2016
Spaceship toy
Flat blue plastic spaceship toy. Simple but effective. Hearkens back to the old flat army sets one could order from comic book ads.
ID
|
160005
|
|
Object
|
American
handball
|
|
Length
|
90mm
|
|
Material
|
Rubber
|
|
Provenance
|
Dallas,
Texas
|
|
Credit
Line
|
The
Museum of Parking Lot Junk
|
American Handball
This is a ball for playing handball. More precisely,
American handball, as opposed to the team sport played in the Olympics. I know
that because it is about 4.76 cm across. Bigger than a squash ball, smaller
than a racquetball. You can imagine how thrilled my family is that I stop and
take measurements of these things.
| ID | 160004 | |
| Object | American handball | |
| Material | Rubber | |
| Provenance | Dallas, Texas | |
| Credit Line | The Museum of Parking Lot Junk |
Sunday, May 1, 2016
Element magnet
Blue plastic, magnet on the back. This is from a periodic table of the elements magnet set from Target. And not a very accurate one. There is no element D. There is a Db which is Dubnium, not Dabnium like it says here. And, though it's mostly rubbed off, there is a number 153 at the top left corner. Indicating this is element 153. Which is 35 more than the current highest number on the table, 118 Ununoctium. For shame. Shame!
| ID | 160003 | |
| Object | Advertising magnet | |
| Material | Plastic, magnetic back | |
| Provenance | Dallas, Texas | |
| Credit Line | The Museum of Parking Lot Junk |





