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Another Colossal Cover-up – Soho Grand Street Coca-Cola Sign – 1998-2011

September 1998 with Rachel Whiteread Watertower © Frank H. Jump

On view June 1998 – November 2000

New York, NY — On Wednesday, June 10th, the Public Art Fund opened its most ambitious project to date: Water Tower, British artist Rachel Whiteread’s first public sculpture in the United States.

Water Tower is a translucent resin cast of the interior of a once functioning, 12′ 2″ (high) x 9′ (diameter) wooden water tank, the largest such cast ever created with this material. The wooden tank served as a mold for the resin and once removed, a frozen monolithic form was revealed. At the beginning of June, the hollow cast will be raised seven stories to rest upon the dunnage (steel tower frame) of a Soho rooftop and remain visible from street level at the corner of West Broadway and Grand Street for one year.

Situated among two functioning water tanks, Water Tower is described by the artist as a “jewel in the Manhattan skyline”. On a cloudy day, the weathered surface of the original tank’s interior, will be visible from street level, providing a ghostly form of its previous structure. In bright sunlight the translucent resin will become a beacon of refracted light, and at night the unlit sculpture will disappear against the darkened sky. Poetic, yet incongruous, Whiteread’s Water Tower powerfully represents a deep felt need for public sculpture to be physically present yet, paradoxically, ephemeral.

Whiteread was approached by the Public Art Fund four years ago, shortly after the explosive public interest in House, her concrete casting of an East London row house for which the artist received the prestigious Turner Prize. Whiteread’s House was a natural extension of her inverted castings of domestic objects such as mattresses, chairs, tables and water bottles that grew in scale to include the cast of a single room, Ghost, which was exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art in 1994. – Public Art Fund dot org

April 2009 Right after the first cover-up by Colossal Media © Frank H. Jump

March 1, 2011 - Latest ad by Colossal Media © Frank H. Jump

More Fading Ads at Eccentric Roadside

Grand Hotel - Fireproof - Chattanooga Tennessee © Gunnar & Sherry @ Eccentric Roadside

Check out my buddies Gunnar & Sherry at their Eccentric Roadside blog!

This blog is devoted to old fashioned American roadside attractions… the wonderfully big, bizarre, crazy, wacky, quirky, weird, funny, unique and mundane sites you see travelling cross-country by car in the USA, where getting there really is all the fun!

 

Coca-Cola – Bristol, TN/VA

© Frank H. Jump

Coca-Cola – Relieves Fatigue – Carbondale, PA

© Frank H. Jump

Vincenzo giving the Coke sign a high-five 2006 © Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

2006 © Frank H. Jump

2006 © Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Enamel Coca-Cola Sign – Off Nostrand Avenue – Flatbush, Brooklyn

Hipstamatic shot - July 2010 - © Frank H. Jump

Coca Cola – Candy – Sweets – Queen Street E – Leslieville, Toronto – ON, Canada

© Frank H. Jump

Coca-Cola Bottling Company Of NY Inc – Off the LIE – Maspeth, Queens

© Photoshopped by Frank H. Jump - taken by Vincenzo Aiosa

© Photoshopped by Frank H. Jump - taken by Vincenzo Aiosa

Uneeda Biscuit – National Soda Cracker – Coca-Cola – Watertown, NY

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Wash & Dry – Coca-Cola – Venice Beach, CA

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

United Railway Telegraph School – Coca-Cola – Graffiti – Urban Ediglyph – Fading Ad Wiki – The Tenderloin – San Francisco, CA

© Frank H. Jump

On Flicker & elsewhere on the blogosphere:

See Ediglyph definition on the Fading Ad Wiki.

ediglyph a term Jump invented from the words edifice (building) and petroglyph (ancient stone wall etching). Ediglyphs encompass fading ads and graffiti. – Fading Ad Wiki