Public life is rarely completely transparent, although Washington was home to one unique attempt. In 1960, long before web cameras invited us to witness Jennifer Ringley's every moment, you could make your way to the corner of Nichols Avenue and V Street SE and see Lynn Arnold living inside a sheer glass cube. No less remarkable was the giant chair where the glass cube sat. Although the experiment lasted only 42 days, the chair became a landmark of the Anacostia neighborhood, where Washingtonians with egos large enough for the big chair are seldom seen.
Art as well as commerce seeks attention by exposing the mundane.
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