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With fake paperwork and a roguish attitude, he made the San Francisco Bay his gallery
发布日期:2024-12-19 08:18:04
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Welcome to a new NPR series where we spotlight the people and things making headlines — and the stories behind them.


The Golden Gate Bridge may be the most iconic monument on the San Francisco Bay. But for decades, smaller monuments would pop up along the East Bay shoreline: whimsical sculptures of biplanes, like the Red Baron, perched on pier pilings.

Tyler James Hoare was the man behind those sculptures, and he died on January 31 at 82 years old.

Who was he? Tyler James Hoare was born in Joplin, Mo. – along Route 66, as he boasted in an old video. He studied at the University of Kansas, where, at the time, abstract art was the big thing.

How do his loved ones want him remembered?

The takeaway: Hoare never got used to the digital world. He didn't own a computer or email account. But Matt Reynoso, an old friend and owner of The Compound Gallery where Hoare used to show his work, said he was still an "amazing communicator." He would often call and send letters.

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