It was a BEAUTIFUL DAY.
Friday, August 15 was the ribbon-cutting of Washington Avenue Park with JODY
PINTO’S Land Buoy referencing both ecology and the history of the site.
Jody Pinto, Land Buoy, August 15, 2014, at the eastern end of the Washington Avenue Park. The artist is at the top, in turquoise. |
The Washington Avenue Park is in South
Philadelphia, at Washington Avenue and Columbus Boulevard, directly behind the Sheet
Metal Workers Union Hall. Across the river are the city of Camden and the
Battleship New Jersey. It feels like midway between the Benjamin Franklin and
Walt Whitman Bridges.
Philadelphia has made enormous progress in reclaiming its
waterfront. Adjacent to the park is a walking and bike path -- turn a corner
and there are quiet and greenery and stunning river views. There were
unconfirmed rumors of bizarre turtle activity and one very handsome cormorant.
There’s no question that fish and birds are returning to this stretch of the
Delaware.
Pier 53 was an immigration point from the 1870s until
1915. Remnants of the old foundations that are still in the water extend beyond
the new walkway – these grid-patterned wood pilings delineate the scale and
shape of the original pier. The more than one million arrivals were mostly
eastern and southern European families; some of their descendants still live nearby
in the Italian Market neighborhood. Jody Pinto’s father, the artist Angelo
Pinto, and this family came to American through Pier 53.
Land Buoy
is fifty-five feet tall, with a rope-inspired spiral staircase that leads up
sixteen feet. There’s a solar-powered blue top that will glow at night. The act
of walking up the stairs lowers anxiety as it raises expectations: the 360-degree
view at the top is breathtaking. If there’s enough wind the spire will move and
seem to adjust itself – to be on the stairs when that happens is amazingly
invigorating.
On Friday, when the crowd had gathered, Philadelphia’s Mayor
Michael Nutter was clearly enjoying himself. It was such a pleasant occasion
and everyone was having a good time. He did express concern about that
afternoon’s Little League game. He
needn’t have worried: Mo’ne Davis carried the Taney Dragons to victory. It was
a wonderful day all around.
Useful links:
An extensive discussion of the Pinto family’s
Philadelphia history:
http://hiddencityphila.org/2014/08/the-pintos-a-philadelphia-immigration-story-told-through-art-at-pier-53/
Historical photographs of
the Pier:
www.delawareriverwaterfront.com/hi-res-photos/2013/10/30/pier-532