Gallery

View of General Motors, the transparent Pontiac Ghost Car in 1939

General Motors, the transparent Pontiac Ghost Car was unveiled at the 1939 World’s Fair in New York as part of General Motors’ Futurama exhibit, 1939. General Motors Archive.

 

More than a substance, plastic is the very idea of its infinite transformation.

–Roland Barthes


The Yurikamome Elevated Train passes behind a Plexiglas map of the Shiodome Sio-Site business complex, located in Minato Ward in central Tokyo, Japan, April 14, 2008. J. Lumiere / Alamy.

Grosfeld House Plexiglas bedroom, 1942. From Decorative Art 1942 – The Studio Year Book, edited by C. G. Holme. [The Studio Ltd., London, 1942]. The Print Collector / Heritage Images / Alamy.

Telephone acrylic dome in the Palace Hotel, Stockholm, Sweden, 1950s. Photo Kristoffersson ref cb23-2 / Classic Picture Library / Alamy.

Rohm and Haas Company. “Woman Polishing Plexiglas at Rohm and Haas Facility,” 1940–1949. Rohm & Haas Company Archives, Box 18 (Photographs), Folder 12. Science History Institute. Philadelphia. Science History Institute Digital Collections.

A Farnsworth table model television receiver installed in a Lucite cabinet to show the operation of the components, 1949. rbm Vintage Images / Alamy.

Jane Rieger of Golders Green seen with the first all-plastic greenhouse at the First International British Plastics Exhibition, July 7, 1957. Keystone Pictures usa / zumapress / Alamy.

A McDonald’s in Chicago, 2008. James Kirkikis / Alamy.

Ocular prosthesis. Evil Kahn / iStock.

Climate measuring devices, Mt Zugspitze summit station, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Bavaria, Germany, Europe, November 10, 2011. Alamy.

Color plastic acrylic shapes, Plexiglas, April 2, 2020. Opreanu Roberto Sorin / Alamy.

Red, green, blue, beige, aqua, brown, yellow and navy rows of a horizontal multi-colored crochet lines pattern, June 11, 2023. Dorin Puha / Alamy.

Orlon acrylic by DuPont, “Just for Kicks,” 1960. adsR / Alamy.

Heart-shaped sunglasses. William Dondyk / iStock.

Blurred view through protective glass. Hockey player on the ice surface of the stadium, February 13, 2023. Edophoto / Panther Media Global / Alamy.

 

The NHL theory of violence goes something like this: Hockey is by its nature a violent game. Played in an area confined by boards of unbreakable glass, by players carrying sticks travelling at speeds approaching thirty miles per hour, collisions occur.

–Ken Dryden


Haruka Kojin, Contact Lens, 2011. Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo. Photo: daici ano.

Unknown. Handbag, early 1950s. Engraved perspex. Given by Peggy Marchant, © Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 1996/2203.

Pigeonholes full of safety glasses high school workshop in Western Australia, March 5, 2018. Chris de Blank / Alamy.

Plexiglas milling on a CNC machine at a furniture factory, October 22, 2019. Marina Demkina / Alamy.

Outdoor basketball backboard and hoop rim with chain net in urban residential district, Serbia, 2023. Igor Stevanovic / Alamy.

Walkway, Centre Pompidou, Paris, France. Kate Hockenhull / Alamy.

National Guard members at the Metro Detention Center in Downtown Los Angeles on June 8th, 2025, amid protests against federal immigration raids, June 8, 2025. Jim Newberry / Alamy.


Your shield like a wing, protects your bulletproof heart from the wind, your right arm black in the cloth of your brothers. Full face visor. Baby gladiator.

–Riot Police, Sun Yung Shin


Glowing red exit sign, Plexiglas, July 11, 2019. MirrorImages / Alamy.

Brilliant Move

Brilliant Move is the Brooklyn-based creative studio of Marci Hunt LeBrun specializing in building websites on the Squarespace platform – among many other things.

I love working with small businesses, nonprofits, and other creatives to help them organize their ideas, hone their vision, and make their web presence the best it can be. And I'm committed to keeping the process as simple, transparent, and affordable as possible.

https://brilliantmove.nyc
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Introduction

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Plexiglas hits the road