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This video was filmed on November 10, 2015 with a DJI Phantom 3 quadcopter. About Pasaquan: Location and History Located near Buena Vista, Georgia, USA, Pasaquan is a world-renowned visionary art site that was created by the late Eddie Owens Martin, between the mid-1950s and his death in 1986. For a more detailed history, go to: The New Georgia Encyclopedia: St. EOM Ownership Since St. EOM's death and until recently, Pasaquan was owned by the Pasaquan Preservation Society, a private, not-for-profit, 501(c)(3) organization. In June of 2014 Pasaquan Preservation Society deeded Pasaquan to The Kohler Foundation for complete restoration. At the end of the restoration process Pasaquan will go to Columbus State University. The Preservation Effort Thanks to The Kohler Foundation of Wisconsin, Pasaquan is currently undergoing complete restoration, a process which is expected to take approximately two years. Upon completion of restoration, The Kohler Foundation will gift Pasaquan to Columbus State University. Pasaquan is a 7-acre (28,000 m2) compound near Buena Vista, Georgia. It was created by an eccentric folk artist named Eddie Owens Martin (1908-1986), who called himself St. EOM. An internationally renowned art site, it consists of six major structures including a redesigned 1885 farmhouse, painted concrete sculptures, and 4 acres (16,000 m2) of painted masonry concrete walls. In September 2008, Pasaquan was accepted for listing on the National Register of Historic Places.[1] Martin inherited the land from his mother and, using proceeds earned from fortune telling, transformed the house and its surrounding land. In an article on the outsider artist, Tom Patterson describes Pasaquan as “one of the most remarkable folk art environments in America— a sort of mock pre-Columbian psychedelic wonderland of brightly painted totems, curved and angled walls and walkways, and wildly ornamented structures that [Martin] called “temples” and “pagodas.”