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Venue organizers are allowing st-ogh-ners to smoke up or munch their edibles while viewing the trippy, giant visualizations inspired by the Dutch artist’s dream-like works.
Chambers, who said he earned a comfortable living in the marijuana industry, owns roughly 400 works of psychedelic art. That candy-colored trove now rotates through the Chambers Project.
And a very, very trippy one. They explain: The artists spent six weeks in the forest fascinated by the silence and natural occurrences in nature, especially the phenomenon “bioluminescence”.
Knoefler says he plans to keep weed bombing until the city addresses his concerns, and may even ramp up the campaign ahead of Art Basel. "We'll paint the weeds once a month if we have to," he says.