Off Shore Muse
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Friday, April 24, 2026
Thursday, April 23, 2026
The Andy Warhol Museum
117 Sandusky Street
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Andy Warhol, born Andrew Warhola on August 6, 1928 was the youngest of three sons born to Andrej Warhola and Julia Zavacky Warhola. His parents immigrated to the United States from the European region that is now Slovakia, settling into the working-class neighborhood of Uptown in Pittsburgh. Warhol graduated from Carnegie Mellon University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Pictorial Design in 1949 and soon after moved to New York City to pursue a career as a commercial artist.
Throughout the 1950s, he became one of the most successful illustrators of his time and won numberous awards for his work. His clients included Tiffany & Co., The New York Times, Bonwit Teller and others. Much of his commercial work was based on photographs and other source images, a process he would use for the rest of his life. While he continued to work as a commercial artist throughout his career, in the early '60s Warhol transitioned into the fine art world gaining notoriety in the Pop Art movement.
Early Pop paintings were based on comics and ads, with his series of Campbells' Soup Cans in 1962 creating a buzz in the art world that launched Warhol as a celebrity. Other early subjects drew upon Warhol's life-long fascination with Hollywood. In 1962, he began a large series of celebrity portraits which included Marilyn Monroe, Elvis Presley and Elizabeth Taylor.
The Andy Warhol Museum Mission and Values
.. to engage and inspire through Warhol's life, art and legacy ..
The life story of Andy Warhol, in all its complexity, is inspirational and guides our work. Our collection is the heart of our institution and we will succeed through sharing, preserving and interpreting the collection in the most accessible way possible. The museum is a place to express and explore multiple perspectives, push boundaries and challenge conventions. The Warhol believes in learning by doing and being a place of experimentation. The Warhol is committed to advancing diversity, equity and inclusion in every aspect of our work.
"If you want to know all about Andy Warhol, just look at the surface of my paintings and me, and there I am. There's nothing behind it."
Andy Warhol
Circa 1966
Self-Portrait
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
The Clipper Flxible Badge
The Flxible Company celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2024, marking a century since the company built its first bus in 1924. The main celebration, the Flxible & Converted Bus Centennial Summit was held from August 21-25, 2024 in Loudonville, Ohio featuring a parade of historic buses on August 24. The event featured over 20 iconic Flxible buses, including a 1924 model from Canada and the 1947 Clipper used by the Goodyear Blimp. The celebration was organized by Flxible Owners International to honor the company.
The Flxible Co. (pronounced "flexible") was an American manufacturer of intercity coaches and transit buses. Founded in 1913 in Loudonville, Ohio the company initially produced motorcycle sidecars before transitioning to buses in the 1920s. Flxible was a major competitor to General Motors in the transit bus market and was one of the largest North American manufacturers during its peak.
In 1919, the company dropped the first "E" in "flexible" and changed its name to The Flxible Company so the name could be trademarked. Flxible was one of the largest transit-bus manufacturers in North America.
The three primary, iconic intercity coach models produced by Flxible that defined their mid-century lineup were the Clipper (1937-1950), the VisiCoach (1950-1958) and the StarLiner (1957-1967). These buses are recognized for their distinct design often featuring high-mounted driving positions and large panoramic windows in later models.
The Clipper was known for its "Airway" style and early adoption of intercity design. It featured smaller windows and a distinct front badge placement.
The VisiCoach was introduced with larger, higher side windows and a flatter roof to improve visibility.
The Starliner was a later more modernized model that often featured a "rooftop eyebrow" window for increased light and a script version of the Flxible logo.
Other notable types produced included the "Airporter" (1946-1950) and the "Flxliner" (1963-1969).
1955 Flxible
1957 Flxible Starliner
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
The Cathedral of Learning
University of Pittsburgh (main campus)
4200 Fifth Avenue (Oakland neighborhood)
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Monday, April 20, 2026
Train of Tomorrow
Artist's conception of the Moon Glow observation car from a promotional brochure distributed by General Motors describing the Train of Tomorrow, a demonstrator built by GM and Pullman-Standard
In 1947, General Motors ordered four domes ("Moon Glow" lounge, "sky view" diner, "star Dust" coach and Dream Cloud" sleeper) from Pullman for a new publicity train known as the "Train of Tomorrow". The idea was meant to showcase the latest in rail travel accommodations following WWII. After touring cross-country the equipment was purchased by Union Pacific. Today, "Moon Glow" is the only surviving piece though in need of restoration. Unfortunately, the other cars were scrapped in the 1960s.
The Train of Tomorrow was an American demonstrator train built as a collaboration between General Motors and Pullman-Standard between 1945 and 1947. It was the first new train to consist entirely of dome cars ("Astra-Domes"). It is said the idea was conceived by vice president of GM and general manager of (EMD) Electro-Motive Division Cyrus R. Osborn. He retired from GM in 1962 after 45 years of service.
Cyrus R. Osborn
1897-1968
After GM built a 45-foot scale model of the train for $101,072 ($1,680.280 in 2025 dollars) and displayed it to 350 officials from 55 different Class I railroads in 1945, the Train of Tomorrow was built by Pullman-Standard between October 1946 and May 1947.
"Moon Glow"
The last remaining car from the General Motors Train of Tomorrow is in deperate need of preservation. The immediate need is to raise enough interest and funds to move the car across town (Ogden, UT) to a more secure location and stop its relentless deterioration. Only then can efforts turn to restoration.
The car included 24 seats in the dome and 44 seats in various lounge areas below. The car also with its sister cars toured North America to promote diesel-powered streamliner trains. While the other three cars were scrapped in the 1960s, "Moon Glow" was purchased by Union Pacific and was eventually rescued from a scrapyard and remains the sole survivor. The entire train was designed to showcase futuristic, comfortable and fast travel powered by GM diesel engines with speeds up to 100 mph.
Speeds up to 100 mph in the 1940s is almost unimaginable, by rail.
Sunday, April 19, 2026
The Clark Bar is the most famous candy bar originating from Pittsburgh's North Side created in 1917 by Irish immigrant David L. Clark. It originally sold for five cents and became an extremely popular treat with U.S. soldiers during and after both WWI and WWII.
The Clark Bar became the first successful "combination" candy bar with a crispy, peanut butter-filled chewy taffy-like consistency, coated in milk chocolate. From 1911 until 1983 the candy bar was produced at a manufacturing facility on Martindale Street.
The slogan for the Clark bar was, "I want a Clark bar". Though you may have wanted a Clark bar, often times you weren't able to get the confection. When the manufacturing of the Clark bar left the Pittsburgh area, the only reminder of the city's candy-producing past was the Clark bar sign atop its former production facility. It has changed ownership several times with production being taken over by the Boyer Candy Company in Altoona, PA after a 2018 discontinuation bringing it back to its Pennsylvania roots.
They say that necessity is the mother of invention and the story of Boyer Candy is a great example. During the Great Depression, brothers Bill and Bob Boyer needed a way to make more money to support their family so they decided making candy was the way to do it! It was a family affair from the start, with Bill making fudge and nut raisin clusters in their mother Emily's kitchen. Mother and sister (also named Emily) would wrap the finished product and Bob would sell their delicious treats door-to-door in their Altoona, Pennsylvania neighborhood. The candy was an immediate success!
As the demand for their candy grew, the Boyer brothers would often try making innovative varieties of candy to sell. One of those experiments included covering marshmallow with chocolate. However, they kept finding that the marshmallow remained too soft. Emily, their sister, offered a solution: Why not try using cupcake paper to hold everything in place? Emily's idea worked perfectly and it was on that day the Mallo Cup became the world's first cup candy!
By 1936, their kitchen had grown too small for their Mallo-Cup-making operation and they moved it to a candy-making facility.
Boyer Candy Company Inc. is an historic candy company located in Altoona, PA famous for its Mallo Cup. It operates an outlet store next to the factory where customers can buy a wide variety of its products including bags of "seconds" at a discount and the Mallow Cup with the iconic cardboard coins still part of the packaging. The cardboard coins is a nostalgic tradition where coins from the packaging can still be saved and redeemed for candy or merchandise.
The outlet offers a chance to learn about the company's history through videos though factory tours are no longer available.
The signature chocolate-covered marshmallow creme cup is also available in dark chocolate. The outlet store offers samples, often a free Mallow Cup.
Boyer Candy Company
821 17th Street
Altoona, Pennsylvania
"Momma" Boyer, identified as Emily Boyer, was the mother of Bill and Bob Boyer, the founders of the Boyer Candy Company in Altoona, Pennsylvania. During the great Depression, she assisted her sons by hand-wrapping the homemade candy produced in her kitchen and notably suggested using cupcake papers to form the company's famous Mallo Cup. This occurred when the brothers struggled to keep marshmallow centers in their chocolate candy from flattening. Emily Boyer suggested using paper cupcake cups to hold the shape, creating the firsts cup candy in America. By 1936, the business outgrew her home kitchen, leading to the establishment of their first factory in Altoona.
Saturday, April 18, 2026
Kaufmann's Clock
This historic clock is a beloved Pittsburgh treasure, symbolizing the city's history and serving as a traditional meeting point for generations.
"Meet Me Under the Clock"
Prior to cell phones, the clock was the quintessential, well-known meeting spot for shoppers, couples and friends in Pittsburgh. The clock weighs in at 2,500 pounds and has been a famous meeting spot for over a century, known for the phrase "meet me under the clock". Installed in 1913 to replace an earlier version, it became a cultural icon and a central part of Pittsburgh's identity. Even after the Kaufmann's department store closed the clock remains a fixture representing the city's heritage and serving as a backdrop for traditions like holiday window displays. The Pittsburgh History & Landmarks Foundation designated the clock a significant landmark in 1981.




























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