 Hi there, we're at the San Antonio Botanical Gardens. The Lone Star Art Alliance and the Botanical Gardens brings the art of George Tublowski to the gardens throughout 2017. Come on, let's go take a look. We really started back in 2004, so it's really a wonderful compliment to the garden to have these beautiful pieces of sculpture in the garden, and George's work, they're very bold and very strong, but they also have a very organic and delicate flavor to them too, so they really work well with our architecture and our garden collections. A wonderful compliment. In the horticulture, we use trees and shrubs and annuals and shadows, and in the sculpture world, you use just a different canvas. In George's case, he uses very beautiful pieces of found objects of stainless steel and metal. I've really enjoyed the botanical garden and San Antonio. I not only came to the Alamo as a little kid and bought my buoy knives, but I also, after college, I was in the reserves. I was a medic and I did my training at Brook General Hospital here and started law school here at St. Mary's and then transferred back to SMU. So I've lived in San Antonio at least two years, two and a half years. I'm more of taking the found object I have and letting it hold its own. I'm only as good as the scraps that I get from the scrapyards. I get probably 10,000 pounds of metal every two weeks and sort through it. What would you have to say to anyone who is looking at pursuing their passion in art after a long career? Just jump into it full-time if you can. Just do it day in and day out and you'll get better and you get better and accept criticism. I mean, it's important to listen and hang out with a lot of artists and listen to their challenges and the way that they made their career and some of them will tell you not to do it this way so they can be very helpful. The work of George Tobolowski will be on display throughout the year of 2017. There's always something new to discover in the gardens. I'm Tammy Kegley for Nowcast SA.