Showing posts with label seattle public art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seattle public art. Show all posts

Sunday, October 05, 2014

The paddle ball sculpture at Big Fish Games in Seattle

By Jack Brummet

I was at Big Fish Games for a meeting today.  The last time I was there must have been nearly ten years ago, when they were still pretty much in startup mode. Wow. Things have changed.  Really impressive offices.   The paddle ball sculpture in the parking lot was created by the artist Catherine Mayer in 2011.  

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Thursday, March 20, 2014

The end of the line for Tubs, a Seattle graffiti landmark

By Jack Brummet, Public Arts Editor



I'm going to miss this place. I know people are really divided on graffiti, but after living in NYC five years, my time in Bogota and Cartagena Colombia, The Mission in San Francisco, and even in Russia, I have come to feel that, in general, it improves far more than it detracts. Is it art? Of course it is; it's just not the art that might be hanging in your aunt's living room. Adios Tubs

We've known it was on the chopping block for seven years.  Yes, many/most people considered it urban blight; I always thought of it as an ever-changing and wonderful "eyesore."

Tubs, the amazing graffiti sandbox, has finally been demolished, after years of sitting idle, and many years as an ever-evolving and changing canvas for local spray paint artists.  After the hot tub club Tubs closed in 2007, it was scheduled for demolition.  Finally, seven years later, they actually did expunge it from the face of the earth.

We are sad to see it go, since we know it will either be replaced by a strip mall, or the dreaded condo development with bottom floor retail.  It was good while it lasted.  Fare thee well Tubs! On a conceptual continuity note, I went hot tubbing there a couple of times in the 80's, and it was great.  By the time of its closure, it had become a notoriously skeezy hotbed of lord knows what. . .

We wrote this piece and took some photos on our last visit to the site, on January 2, 2012.

In March 2009 The Free Sheep Foundation (I think these are the same guys who liberated the Bridge Motel on Aurora) occupied the Tubs building in Seattle's U District, which has been "slated for demolition" for a couple of years now.  It's become an wonderfully and continually changing canvas for whatever artist or tagger shows up.  Early on, people were outraged by all the painting, but over time, it has become a popular stopping by point.  I think every neighborhood needs a building like this. 

I like what you've done with the place.

I always stop by when I am in the neighborhood, but have never seen anyone at work.  I think they only come out at night?  I believe there is some kind of loophole in Seattle's graffiti law, in which "the authorities" are unable to do anything about the artistic improvements to this long abandoned building.

If you're interested, there is a Flickr group that continually posts photos as the building evolves.  I took these seven photos on January 2, 2012.






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Monday, March 07, 2011

The Seattle Post Intellingencer globe is looking a little sad and forlorn...

By Mona Goldwater
Seattle Metro Editor



The Seattle Post Intelligencer globe is looking a little sad and forlorn...but nothing a good scrubbing won't fix.  Apparently, when they went out of business, no one was assigned the job of keeping this great globe clean.  The globe is made of steel and is one of the city's most beloved pieces of public art.  I don't know if the building owns it, or The Seattle Times.  The best part about the globe's location is that you can see it from many parts of the great waterfront sculpture park.  Hopefully, before they sell it for scrap they will haul it down and place it in the park.  And maybe bring in the Hat and Boots, and the Pink Elephant car wash sign too. . . 

click to enlarge
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