Antiques lighting

Sheets complimented his art with musical entertainment by Surreal Art, which included Sheets, his wife, Bunny, and their friend, Randy Schartz. The group's music had a sound similar to Electric Light Orchestra, which was popular in the 1970s and 1980s.
Local artists, their families and friends attended the event. This was Sheets' first art show after semi-retirement from working as an engineer. He also enjoys restoring antique cars. One of his favorite projects was restoring a 1950 Porche.
'Tonight is about getting my feet wet in the venue of art,' Sheet said Saturday. 'My art is weird and different. I really hope to get a connection from people in the art world and sell my art.'
Sheets compares himself to Andy Warhol, one of his favorite modern artists



To do a 1928 film in Los Angeles, or any city really, but especially Los Angeles because it's changed so much over the years and wasn't a very centralized or big city, compared to New York... Things have changed a lot. So to go back and do that is very difficult, and it takes a lot of scouting around, and good art direction.
Q: Did you shoot all of the exteriors in Los Angeles?
CE: Yeah, we shot everything there. And we found neighborhoods that were still antique, and we antiqued them some more. We'd go into a neighborhood that's kind of rundown and we'd ask people if we could use their neighborhood, and then we'd fix their house, and make it look like a new house that's from 1928. Q: The character played by John Malkovich -- the crusading, muckraking preacher -- was intriguing. Is he based on an actual historical figure or is he an amalgamation of several people?
CE: These figures all existed. It's actually a true story. Detective Ybarra [Michael Kelly], he existed; Malkovich was a Presbyterian minister [Rev


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