Performing mainly at nightclubs in Madison, Hollywood Autopsy played shows with touring bands such as The Replacements, Killdozer, Hüsker Dü, X,[3] and The Gun Club.
Black-and-white Rolleiflex portraits and 4×5 view camera architectural studies from the series, along with artifacts collected from the subjects, were installed at the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art in 1988.
[19] In 2000, they set about making an experimental documentary film, exhibition, and book, One Million Years is Like Three Seconds, using a Bolex and outdated gelatin silver paper to examine how the technological changes of the 20th century affected four Wisconsin men who lived through them.
[21] A related series of landscapes and architectural studies formed The Wisconsin Project with a blog where they post “found” and “made” postcard images.
[23] J. Shimon & J. Lindemann's subject matter continued to center on people and places in Wisconsin, obsolete technologies, and vernacular photographic forms.
Despite this, they completed work on We Go From Where we Know, an exhibition consisting of photographs, paintings, sculpture, and found objects, at the John Michael Kohler Arts Center, Sheboygan, Wisconsin in 2013.
[25] A Wisconsin-made 1949 Nash Motors Ambassador filled with hand cast concrete corncobs and an installation of hundreds of vintage postcards of Wisconsin were key elements.
The archive consists of approximately 65,000 negatives and transparencies and 5,500 signed prints made by J. Shimon & J. Lindemann using analog photographic processes including ambrotype, Cibachrome, cyanotype, gelatin silver, gum bichromate, platinum/palladium, and tintype.