I think we discussed earlier how museums may act as great fronts for laundering money and anonymously exchanging large crates, I discovered TP is a Manager at The National Museum of Women in the Arts where he displays art like 'Dormitory' which "reflect upon the experience of displaced children in mid-20th century Europe"
After some research, this image of a mock Tabloid cover from this GuerillaGirls source caught my eye.
Thousands of women locked in the basements of D.C. museums!
I realize this is a creative editorial on a male-dominated art world, but I also know these people like to hide things in plain sight, so dug deeper.
1) The museum's Address 1250 New York Ave NW Washington, DC 2005 is connected to the DC underground tunnel network
We know his buddy Alefantis' Properties are all tunnel connected.
2) The museum was a masonic building before it was a museum.
The middle floors were devoted to office, library, and commercial space, while the fifth and sixth floors—the exclusive upper levels—held another, somewhat smaller auditorium for use by the Masons' Scottish Rite and Mystic Shrine. "The stage is to be so arranged that the most elaborate services of the Scottish Rite can be given in their entirety," claimed the Washington Times in 1905—without explaining what exactly that meant.
I think we may have an idea of what that meant.
Waddy Butler Wood, the mason architect of the building said,
As the Temple Association envisioned, the building's location at the tip of a wedge-shaped block provides an aesthetic buffer zone which "permits of no future building being erected sufficiently near to mar [the Temple's] monumental effect ... ."
Here's that complete text from him about the vision of the building from the book 'History of the Grand Lodge and of Freemasonry in the District of Columbia"
What do you guys think? Worth digging deeper?
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pbvrocks ago
OK..so this just sparked something weird..about a year ago my wife and I were staying in downtown Denver. We were out walking and noticed as we were walking over street grates around the Federal Mint...we heard animal noises. It was so startling and out of place we stayed and listened. It appears that the Denver Mint has recorded animal noise emanating from under the mint. We left it in the truly weird category..but might make sense now.
CWenstra ago
http://artsandvenuesdenver.com/public-art/denver-public-art-collection/sound-walk