Show Us your Fanny |
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Fanny PollockSubmitted by LASC After School Art ClassDuring a recent Living Arts and Science Center Arts Class for a local elementary school, children were shown works from different artists and asked to paint Fanny in the style they liked best. One of our favorites was this Jackson Pollock' inspired piece. The artist successfully represented Pollock's abandonment of figurative representation, allowing the line to speak for itself. Nice work. |
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Show us Your Fanny
Our Mascot, Fanny, is quite the chameleon. She's been known to dress up like anything from an angel to a zombie. Many of our staffers have taken it upon themselves to put some clothes on our little Fanny. We decided that this much fun should be shared.
Ready to get Started?
We want to see some of your creativity! Send us an email with your mailing info to fanny@bigassfans.com with "Dressed up Fanny" as the subject and we'll send you a FREE fanny to dress up. When you're finished dressing up Fanny, take a photo and send that photo to fanny@bigassfans.com and we'll post it here and our Facebook page for everyone to see. It's fun and it's FREE!
Dressing up Fannies all started on Facebook. Visit our Facebook page, facebook.com/bigassfans, to upload photos of your own fancy Fanny. It might end up here as the Featured Fanny!
Ninja Fanny
Little is known of Ninja Fanny. Legend has it that she arrived in the Iga region of Japan in the late 16th century to train under master Fūma Kotarō. Her specialty seems to have been to sneak into local buildings and increase the comfort of the occupants without them realizing it. Her skills were so notorious, yet desired, that she came to be known as Obake Kaze, translated as Ghost Wind.

