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#urbanphotography – @bigboppa01 on Tumblr
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musclecars4ever

@bigboppa01 / bigboppa01.tumblr.com

Hi, I'm Alex, I live in Brisbane on the east coast of Australia, and I love muscle cars, well actually anything with a motor tied to it, Street Machines, Hot Rods, Kustom Kulture, sports, The Fast & the Furious imports and stock original muscle, we all come under the umbrella of car enthusiasts. Normal everyday people just don't get it, the automotive zombies that use a car just for transporting them from A to B. It is so much more, your pride and joy, the smell of the upholstery as you open the door, the feel of the seat as you get in it, the grasp, the texture of the gear stick in your hand, the turn of the key in the ignition, the burble and roar of the engine as you fire it up, the sensation of freedom you feel as you back out the driveway, the eagerness you have driving your chariot, your passion down the road. The pleasure and certainty you have taking off, absconding with your vehicle far away from the every day, the worries and stress you leave behind. We capture, guard and enjoy a nostalgic piece in time every opportunity we get to leave the garage and do this. The euphoria of cutting loose, escaping mediocrity, hitting the road, going where your heart desires, just you and your machine because "it's not the destination, the journey is the destination"! Then when you find a partner or companion with a hunger and craving as voracious as you have, the desire, the thirst of all things automotive, Nothing and I mean NOTHING comes even close to this exhilaration of abandonment, when you can share this obsession, this adventure with another, who has the same enthusiasm as you do. To experience those long drive's on a starry night side by side, be captivated by the same encounter, cruising till the sun comes up, that is to live! Love the beast. Hope you enjoy my blog. *No copyright infringement is intended*
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Abandoned train in Salk Desert, Bolivia 🇧🇴

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smidge-j

[Image: An old rusty steam train on some tracks. The tracks are in a very shallow large lake that stretches off into the distance. End ID]

*slaps boiler* You can fit so many ghosts in this baby

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metaffektics

This is not a photo. It's a painting that has been posted, uncredited, to quite a few social medias over the past decade or so, by the reverse image search results. A lot of people seem to think it's a photo/realistic painting of a train graveyard in the Uyuni Salt Flat in Bolivia, from the reflective surface. However, this train (and, very likely, the location as painted) almost certainly does not exist.

This painting is "Dead End" by surrealist South African artist Keith Alexander.

Information is pretty hard to come by about the artist or this painting. He passed away in 1998, and he did not have a personal website I could find. Another guy put up a website to display some information about Alexander and (with the permission of his estate) sell prints of his works, but that website went defunct in \~2022. It now exists only as a facebook page. I think the webmaster may have knnown Alexander in person, but that's speculation. I am certain he is Alexander's biggest fan (I may email him to ask). According to this webmaster's blurb about Alexander, he took a lot of inspiration from southern Africa (certainly, the images that can still be found online do, with a number of landmarks seeming to serve as inspiration).

According to the defunct site (archived article), this picture was heavily inspired by the Martin Luther, a German-built train from 1895 meant to replace ox wagons when it had colonized what is now Namibia. In true failgirl spirit, it stopped working in 1897 and was left to rot in the desert (though it's been restored several times since and now has a shed).

There is an actual train graveyard in Uyuni, Bolivia (Atlas Obscura) which has much more modern trains like that. People seem to assume this painting is of one of these trains becuase of the graveyard's proximity to the Uyuni Salt Flat. However, it isn't actually in the salt flat (evidenced by the surrounding dirt in the pictures), though it seems close enough for local tourism companies to go to both.

Whichever train Alexander took any inspiration from is not verifiable. As Alexander painted a lot of surrealist pieces (it's hard to find pictures of his work, but some can be found here, here, and here), it can't necessarily be claimed that, just because the train he painted resembles a train rotting away in a graveyard, and that the supposed inspiration is much smaller and better-preserved, he must have been inspired by the Bolivian train. Similarly, because he's dead, it can't be said wasn't (though the webmaster is a better authority than anyone else exposed to the internet).

I dunno. The painting is really pretty, and it made me sad that there wasn't credit given, and more sad that the only information behind the piece is a secondhand account from a website primarily designed to sell the artist's work that requires multiple archival sites to view all of it. There's no complete online gallery of his work, from what I can tell - apparently, there are few high-definition photographs of his art to begin with outside of auction houses. There's barely any unarchived information about him.

This post might be one of the better collections of information about him that exists outside of an internet archive.

I don't know who he was. I don't know what he believed in, or stood for. I only really know that the webmaster loved his art enough to share it for over 20 years after his death. One person's love for Keith Alexander's art is the only reason I know anything about him or his work beyond this picture.

I could only hope to be so lucky for someone to love my work so much.

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