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Frank Jump @ Fading Ads of NYC on WFUV’s Cityscape | 90.7 with George Bodarky – Saturday, February 18th @ 7:30AM

7:30 AM on Cityscape with George Bodarky

[ http://www.youtube.com/embed/YEX1L8BH3lU?fs=1

New York City’s saturated with advertisements. They’re on buses, in the subways, atop taxis, and along highways. But, it’s not the newest Calvin Klein ad that catches the attention of acclaimed photographer and urban documentarian Frank Jump. He likes to document so-called ghost signs in the city. These ads from a bygone era are visible, but often overlooked — and for Jump, they’re also a metaphor for his own long survival with HIV. Several of Jump’s photographs are included in a new book called Fading Ads of New York City (History Press). Jump is our guest on this week’s Cityscape.

CLICK HERE: FOR WFUV’s Cityscape Website CLICK HERE: FOR WFUV PODCASTS on iTunes –  To listen, please click on “Fading Ads” after 2/18/12 CLICK HERE: FOR WFUV’s Cityscape’s FACEBOOK PAGE CLICK HERE: FOR WNET’s METROFOCUS PAGE

Looking Up to Look Back: The Fading Ads of New York – WFUV-WNET – MetroFocus

BOOKS

Looking Up to Look Back: The Fading Ads of New York

George Bodarky and Sarah Berson | February 17, 2012 4:04 AM
Author: Frank Jump
Publisher: The History Press
Publication Date: Nov. 2011

In 1986, when Frank Jump was 26 years old, he was diagnosed as HIV positive. It was a time when doctors still knew little of the disease. They estimated Jump only had a few years left to live.

The doctors were wrong. Nearly 10 years after his diagnosis, things started looking up for Jump — literally.

In 1997, he “discovered†an ad for Omega Oil, a cure-all tonic, painted on the side of a New York City building. It was the beginning of a quest to photograph old ads painted or glued to the sides of city buildings, ads he views as relics of New York’s past. The quest has consumed Jump ever since.

“New York is a never-ending process,†Jump explained in an interview with WFUV’s Cityscape. “Building and reconstruction and renovation of New York is constant. As new buildings go up and old buildings come down, there’s going to be new ads revealed. It’s exciting to watch. I think this will be something I do until the day I die.â€

Click below to see Frank’s photos of fading ads and to read the stories behind them:

Jump has displayed his collection of photographs of faded ads in museums and recently compiled them into a book, “Fading Ads of New York City.â€

As Jump entered his second decade with HIV, he said that the decaying ads came to represent the friends he lost to AIDS. “I’ve watched many, many, many, many people die. I even have address books with telephone numbers that I just stapled shut because everybody in it was gone,†said Jump.

Click below to hear Cityscape host George Bodarky’s interview with Frank Jump about the fading ads project:

Podcast: Play in new window | Download

The artists who painted the ads, some of which go back to the late 19th century, were called “wall dogs.†When Jump began publishing photographs of the ads on his blog, fadingad.com, several of the “wall dogs†contacted him from their nursing homes.

Jump, who is now 52, will stop at nothing in his quest to shoot the ads. He has scaled rickety fire escapes, pulled over on busy highways and walked along elevated train tracks. Jump admits to faking appointments in certain buildings to get up to the roof and even outrunning guard dogs to get the right angle in the right light.

“This book tells two stories,†wrote Dr. Andrew Irving, an anthropologist, in the book’s foreward. “That of New York City and its obsession with money, advertising and renewal over the last 150 years; and the story of the life of a teacher and photographer who has dedicated much of his time to documenting and archiving the hundreds of gigantic advertisements that were painted, often by hand, on the sides of walls and buildings.†Jump feels that the faded ads open a window into the New York of yesteryear and can change the way we see the city.

Does Jump think the city should restore the ads to their former glory? He says no. Just like every living thing, they were meant to fade away — or be torn down unexpectedly.

Featured Fade – Plomberie Sanitaire – Chauffage Central – Sanitary Plumbing & Central Heating – Toulon, France – Kovel/Son

© Kovel/Son

© Kovel/Son

Wear Gossard Corsets – They Lace in Front – Chicago, IL

© Frank H. Jump

1913 Ad H W Gossard Maternity Corset Abdominal Support

Courtesy of Bobbins & Bombshells

The movement of factories to find lower labor costs is not something that started when shoes began to be made in China. In 1920 Gossard opened a factory in Ishpeming, Michigan that eventually employed 600 women, Once it was the Upper Peninsula of Michigan (and, to a much greater extent, the American south) that offered a ready supply of inexpensive non-unionized labor. I knew a woman who came to the U.P. in the late 1940s to organize the workers for the International Ladies Garment Workers Union. After a long strike, she succeeded and the plant continued for another 20 years after that, finally closing in 1966. There’s a nice exhibit about “The Gossard” in the Cliffs Mine Museum in Ishpeming and a brief article about it here. Best quote:”You were a forward thinking woman if you wore a front-lacing corset.” - Comment from Yooperann on Chicago Man’s Flickr Photostream

Featured Fade – F. Weber – Manufacturers of Artists Colors – Philadephia, PA – Triborough

Supplies for Architects Draughting - Blueprints - Flickr Photostream © Triborough

Featured Fade – Lindsay Laboratories – Nevins & Schermerhorn Streets – Downtown Brooklyn – Bennett Cohen

© Bennett Cohen

© Bennett Cohen

Elsewhere on the Internet:

More old ads that are fading fast Ephemeral NY – March 4, 2009

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2012-02-12

I hear Madonna is performing live somewhere today, any clues where? #thingsgaypeoplesay # @ScarlettMcHugh Wassup Scarlett? # Bette Davis, we love you. Vogue. # Ooopsie #superbowl # I'm sixty and I know it? #superbowl # We don't drink, we don't smoke Norfolk Norfolk Norfolk! #superbowl # #CeeLo looks like Pearl Bailey #superbowl # @CapehartJ CeeLo looks like Pearl Bailey! in reply to CapehartJ # @jorenerene There once was a chap from Nantucket… in reply to jorenerene # Shit, people are firing weapons on the block. Must be a touchdown. We do that in Flatbush. #superbowl # Human Rights Related? iPhone and iPad Assembly to Move to Brazil – China Censorship Watch http://t.co/W7dtPkau via @addthis # Tell Obama to Cease FDA Ties to Monsanto http://t.co/Dp0jvH9C #signon # @MaddowBlog Perhaps Scranton? Haven't been there in a month or so. in reply to MaddowBlog # Video: John sebastian (by goeke) Darling Be Home Soon http://t.co/GyHvOTzE # @MaddowBlog @TPM Hopefully America is tired of hateful self-righteousness. in reply to MaddowBlog # Repeal PA state-sponsored "Year of the Bible" http://t.co/i7n06226 #signon # Spare Times for Feb. 10-16 – http://t.co/o7aaLD2g Brooklyn Historical Society: Frank Jump ‘Fading Ads of Brooklyn’ http://t.co/VC2tO183 # @tweentingurl Sugar Honey Iced Tea in reply to tweentingurl # @tweentingurl Still doesn't compare to the language coming from a ten year old. in reply to tweentingurl # @WFUVCityscape Loved 5 senses pc. I start yr w/ all grades 2-5 in technology asking the question: What do you hear, smell, taste, see, feel? # Frank Jump @ Greater Astoria Historical Society: Events http://t.co/7QIypdme Fading Ads of NYC #

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Featured Fades – Lipton’s – A Place to Shop for Women & Children & Bloomfield’s Best Hatter & Haberdasher – Fischer’s Men’s Shop at the Centre – Bloomfield, NJ – James Curran, 2010

Bloomfield, NJ 2010 © James Curran

BLOOMFIELD — A rare glimpse of Depression-era Bloomfield is on display just steps away from the town center, where two old-time advertisements painted on the brick side of a Washington Street building have been unveiled after being covered up since the 1930s.

Now the advertisements, and the wall they’re painted on at the corner of the corner of Washington Street and Lackawanna Place across from the train station, are slated to be razed too, as part of the town’s redevelopment plan.

The ads for Lipton’s department store and Fischer’s, a men’s clothing and hat shop, are relics of a bygone era in Bloomfield and evoke a certain nostalgia among some of the town’s older residents, said Jean Kuras, president of the Bloomfield Historical Society. – Aliza Appelbaum – The Star-Ledger

 Lipton’s – A Place to Shop for Women & Children

13 Broad Street at the Centre © James Curran

Courtesy of Bloomfield History dot org

Bloomfield’s Best Hatter & Haberdasher – Fischer’s Men’s Shop at the Centre

Stetson Hats - Manhattan Shirts © James Curran

Courtesy of Bloomfield History dot org

Elsewhere on the Internet:

John Lee’s Photostream - Flickr Bloomfield History dot org Bloomfield redevelopment reveals glimpse of Depression-era town – Sunday, November 07, 2010 – The Star-Ledger

Brighton Beach Garage Ad – Neptune Avenue – Brooklyn

© Frank H. Jump

Spare Times for Feb. 10-16 By THOMAS GAFFNEY – NYTIMES – Frank Jump @ Brooklyn Historical Society – February 15th

  Around Town
Published: February 9, 2012 
ArtsBeat
Arts & Entertainment Guide

A sortable calendar of noteworthy cultural events in the New York region, selected by Times critics.

Museums and Sites

     Brooklyn Historical Society: ‘Fading Ads of Brooklyn’ brooklynhistory.org; $10, or $8 for members.(Wednesday, February 15) Vintage advertisements that were put on brick walls around the city decades ago are still in plain sight, and some have survived for almost a century. The photographer Frank Jump will discuss the phenomenon of the fading ads and his endeavor to document them. At 7 p.m., 128 Pierrepont Street, near Clinton Street, Brooklyn Heights, (718) 222-4111, 

From the book Fading Ads of NYC - History Press © Frank H. Jump


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