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Fence-Hopping Blogger Chronicles Fading ‘Ghost Signs’ Across New York City

January 26, 2012 1:24pm | By Nick Hirshon, DNAinfo Reporter/Producer

Teacher Frank Jump, who profiles “ghost signs” on his blog, will sign copies of his new book on Thursday night at the Queens Historical Society in Flushing. (Frank Jump)

FLUSHING — Frank Jump has hopped fences, begged his way into strangers’ apartments and even trespassed in pursuit of his art.

Jump, who teaches technology to second – fifth graders at Public School 119 in Brooklyn, has long photographed fading ads on brick buildings across the city, known to aficionados as “ghost signs.” His exploits, chronicled on his blog and recently compiled into a book, have led him to restricted areas and garnered weird looks, but his drive to document an overlooked element of Big Apple art has always guided him through.

“I never really worry, I never think,” Jump said. “I really felt like I was some guerrilla tactic photographer where I had to do these things stealth. Get in, get out.”

Jump will present a 120-image presentation of his fading ad photos Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Queens Historical Society, taking visitors on a virtual tour of the fleeting historic treasures across New York City.

Snapping the images is something of a cathartic process for Jump, who began photographing the ads when he was 26 years old, after being diagnosed with HIV. Now 51 and healthy, Jump still feels a lasting connection to the signs that he felt drawn to initially because he thought that they were, like him, fading away.

The lecture will mark a sort of homecoming for Jump, who lives in Flatbush but has deep Queens roots. He was born in Far Rockaway and grew up in Belle Harbor, Laurelton and Howard Beach.

Jump said he gets requests to tag along on his adventures from the unlikeliest of places.

In the summer of 1997, Jump was at a family function when he noticed that his husband’s niece, who was visiting from Italy, seemed bored.

Jump said she asked to go with him as he tracked down the ghost signs in the adventurous fashion she had heard so much about.

He took her to Jamaica Avenue in Woodhaven, an area he suspected had ghost signs but had never fully inspected. Sure enough, he spotted what appeared to be a fading ad beyond a plywood fence of a construction site. The fence was padlocked, but he smashed the wood and entered, and found an ad for a local business named M. Rappoport’s Music Store that was revealed after an adjacent building had been knocked down.

“It just seemed like I was being filmed, like it was a reality TV show,” he said, adding that the adventure was so smooth, his husband’s niece thought it was a setup.

Marisa Berman, the historical society’s executive director, said she has already fielded numerous phone calls inquiring about Jump’s lecture. She said the fading ads appeal to people in almost every neighborhood since they pass them so often.

“It’s something you may have noticed but not something you would have absorbed,” she said.

Jump said that while many New Yorkers don’t appreciate the ads, they would miss them if they were painted over or destroyed.

“If it was missing from the landscape, it’d be like going to the Grand Canyon and it’s filled in,” Jump said.

Read more: http://www.dnainfo.com/20120126/flushing/fencehopping-blogger-chronicles-fading-ghost-signs-across-new-york-city#ixzz1kbSPRvSm

Frank Jump with Bobby Rivers on Metro @ Large: with Dave Frieder & Gerard Suarez – Parts One & Two – August 1998

Fading Ads of New York City will be released in November 2011 – PRE-ORDER ON Barnes & Noble Books!

CLICK FOR LARGER IMAGE - © Frank H. Jump 2011 - The History Press

PRE-ORDER @ B&N NOW!

Philip Morris – America’s Finest Cigarette – Flatiron, NYC

from the forthcoming book - The Fading Ads of NYC - The History Press © Frank H. Jump

Hams Capocolli – Brooklyn Navy Yard 1997 – Fading Ad Campaign – Sandra Walker, Royal Institute UK – watercolourist

© Sandra Walker, RI

© Frank H. Jump

Paragon Means Oil – Off Borden Avenue – LIC, Queens

July 2005 © Frank H. Jump

Previously posted April 16, 2008

From upcoming book Fading Ad Campaign: The Chrome Age

Omega Oil Revisited – Fading Ad Campaign: The Chrome Age

Omega Oil, 1997 – Fading Ad Campaign © Frank H. Jump

This is the first image I ever shot for the Fading Ad Campaign. Below are some pics I took when revisiting Omega for the filming of the documentary short  Not Fade Away by director Jim Sayegh.

December 5, 2009 © Frank H. Jump

December 5, 2009 © Frank H. Jump

December 5, 2009 © Frank H. Jump

December 5, 2009 © Frank H. Jump

Reflection in Police Precinct’s Window – December 5, 2009 © Frank H. Jump

Working cover for upcoming book © Frank H. Jump

TONIGHT AT 9PM – Fading Ad Blog Brooklyn Independent Television Spot Selected as Best of Brooklyn Tours 2010 – BCAT TV

Best of Brooklyn Independent Television: Tours 2010

It’s a big borough—seventy-one square miles, in fact. There’s so much to see and do that to try and pack it all into one tour would be close to impossible. This Best of BIT episode takes a stab at visiting as many Brooklyn historical sites and neighborhoods in half an hour—not such a hard task thanks to the tours BIT has featured in the last year. Learn about hidden stories in Brooklyn Heights, thanks to Homer Fink’s Hidden Heights Tour. Frank H. Jump (of Fading Ad Blog) takes viewers on his hunt for vintage mural advertisements in Brooklyn neighborhoods. Have a “World Cup Fever” relapse at five Brooklyn hotspots as fans cheer and jeer favorite international teams. Join Rabbi Beryl Epstein on his Jewish Hassidic Walking Tour for a fascinating look at how this culture thrives in Crown Heights. Then Levy’s Unique New Yorktakes viewers on a two-wheeled history lesson in the borough’s great beer-making tradition.

TAKEN FROM E-MAIL:

BRIC has announced that December 27th – December 31st will be its “Best of Brooklyn Independent Television Week.” This special week of programming will visit some of our favorite Brooklyn Independent Television stories covered in 2010.

Out of the hundreds of packages we created in the past year or so, a Brooklyn Review segment featuring Fading Ad Blog has been selected for the Best of BIT: Brooklyn Tours episode. We thought you’d like to know so you can tell your friends, neighbors and more about your special selection and the airing of Best of BIT: Brooklyn Tours.

The Best of BIT: Brooklyn Tours episode will air at 1:00pm and 9:00pm on Wednesday, December 29th on BRIC Arts | Media | Bklyn’s BCAT TV Network. (If you do spread the word, please tell your friends it’ll air “On Brooklyn Independent Television on the BCAT TV Network”—we underwent a branding change and need to get the new verbiage out there.)

Best of BIT: Brooklyn Tours will air on Brooklyn’s Time Warner 56, Cablevision 69, RCN 84 and in all five boroughs on Verizon 44. It will also stream online at www.bricartsmedia.org/bit (launch Channel 3). It will be available online at www.bricartsmedia.org/bitspecials a couple days after its airdate.

For our official press release, visit http://bk.ly/w40 (we’ve also got it posted on our blog at http://bk.ly/w46) with future plugging coming to our various social media platforms including Facebook (www.facebook.com/bkindependenttv ) and Twitter (@bkindependenttv).

We hope you’ll enjoy your feature on Best of BIT: Brooklyn Tours. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact me at this email address or direct telephone number listed below.

Thank you for your continued support of BRIC’s Brooklyn Independent Television on the BCAT TV Network!

Sincerely,

Ms. Lee Eddy
Marketing & Communications Manager
BRIC Community Media

Thank you Lee! It is an honor to serve the Brooklyn historical community.

Frank H. Jump in Front of Eaglo Paint Ad – Nostrand Avenue & Glenwood Road – Flatbush 2001

Taken by Dr. Andrew Irving, Professor of Visual Anthropology, University of Manchester © Irving

This was taken by Dr. Andrew Irving a year before this ad was covered up. For more history of this ad go to the Fading Ad Campaign website. While I’m still editing for the publication of the eBook for this project, it is my desire to offer some of the images ahead of time.

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