It was 1968 when Czechoslovakia is invaded by Russia; Francisco “Morochito” Rodriguez wins the first Venezuelan Gold Medal in the Olympic Games; “Bloody Monday” marks one of the most violent days of the Parisian student revolt; Andy Warhol is shot in his loft by Valerie Solanis; Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy were assassinated; Jacqueline Kennedy marries the shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis; Apollo 8 is the first manned space ship to orbit the moon; and John Martin Milkovisch "got sick of mowing the damn grass."
Absolutely
true, 1968 was the year that Mr Milkovisch, a retired upholsterer who resided
in 222 Malone Street,
in Houston, Texas, decided he was tired of taking care of his garden and decided to replace his lawn with cement slabs covered with marbles,
curious stones, metal pieces and all sorts of interesting junk.
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Once
the front and back yard were done, he also started covering the outside walls
of his house with flattened out beer cans.
He also adorned the fences with other parts of
beer cans, beer caps, beer bottles and other beer paraphernalia. “Curtains”
made of long chains of bottoms, pull-tabs and tops of beer cans started hanging from the roof eaves. Curtains,
mobiles, fences, sculptures, windmills, and wind chimes were places everywhere. After 18 years
of work that house virtually disappeared under a “mantle” of aluminum and the
whole beer covered house unexpectedly helped to cut energy bills!

John and his wife Mary in front of the house
Today, the house is known
as the Beer Can House and it is a folk art house owned and operated by the Orange Show
Center for Visionary Art,
an organization founded to preserve works of extraordinary imagination and
provide people with the opportunity to express artistic vision.
 John's working place John's tools

Amen to that! ... Prost!
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