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Fritz Haeg
Artist
Fritz Haeg works between his art, architecture and design practice Fritz Haeg Studio (though the currently preferred clients are animals), the happenings and gatherings of Sundown Salon (now Sundown Schoolhouse), the ecology initiatives of Gardenlab (including Edible Estates), and other various combinations of building, curating, dancing, designing, exhibiting, gardening, organizing, talking, teaching, and writing. His home base since 2001 is a geodesic dome in the hills of Los Angeles.
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2mins
Do what you really believe in, even if you have to have a day job.
3mins
Haeg hates the word “sustainable.”
2mins
We have to stop looking for a silver bullet, Haeg says.
2mins
Balancing the artists core with the society around him.
2mins
Haeg is interested in beauty as a by-product of critical thought.
4mins
The project, Haeg says, comes from his long-postponed desire to work with animals.
2mins
Haeg likes to see his audience’s reaction because, he says, it’s part of the project.
8mins
With his gardens, Haeg hopes to reveal the world we’re living in.
1mins
Haeg draws on the work of a 70s architect who veered off into sculpture.
3mins
Haeg lets his art evolve on its own.
5mins
It all grew out of “Attack the Front Lawn.”
2mins
The famous house on Sundown Drive is up for sale.
2mins
Fritz Haeg wanted to be an architect before he could even spell the world.
8mins
The courtyard at the Whitney Museum of American Art becomes a home to the Castor Canadensis and Haliaeetus leucocephalus.