Gulf Today

Art to the rescue: Old US police, fire boxes get new breath of life

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WASHINGTON: Decades ater they helped save lives in the US capital, police and fire department call boxes still stand on city corners, relics of a time when firefighte­rs used horse-drawn wagons and cops walked the beat. Now, more than 40 years since they were last used as a fire alert and police communicat­ion system, the cast iron curiositie­s in downtown Washington are coming back to life as street art.

To honour prominent women from Washington’s history, local artist Charles Bergen is jazzing up eight call boxes in the city’s bustling heart. Downtown property owners wanted their streets “to be more interestin­g, to be more active,” said Ellen Jones, deputy executive director of the Downtowndc Business Improvemen­t District (BID).

“We think public art is one way to do that,” Jones told AFP. They also really like the idea of turning eyesores “into an asset through art.” The city call boxes are designated historic, said Jones — “so you can’t take them out” of the ground even though some have started to fall apart, missing doors and panels. The refurbishm­ent is jointly funded by BID and Washington’s Commission on the Arts and Humanities. Art on Call, a city-funded restoratio­n effort that ended in 2009, identified 1,100 abandoned boxes in Washington and restored 145 to reflect the identity of various neighbourh­oods.

The boxes were first installed in the 19th century and contained a lever that citizens could pull in the event of a fire. It sent a telegraph signal with the box number to firefighte­rs, who then knew where to respond. Police boxes were slightly different, allowing an officer patrolling on foot to call his precinct house.

“A rule of the job was never to call twice from the same box, for that told the sergeant that the beat was not being walked,” says a plaque on one of the Art on Call boxes. Police radios and the city’s 911 system made call boxes obsolete by the 1970s, but for an artist they remain a unique canvas. “You can’t move these call boxes,” Bergen, 56, tells AFP, so “you get the opportunit­y as an artist to put artwork in some great locations.”

Jurors picked Bergen in a national call for proposals, and he worked with a team that included other artists and even a historian. The call boxes are mounted on pedestals roughly six feet (1.8 meters) tall. Some have a pipe that adds to their height, and which at one time included a light to guide responding firefighte­rs. Bergen uses the original structure but employs various materials, including paint, cast bronze and waterjet-cut stainless steel, to tell the women’s stories and “engage people.” The colour schemes help symbolise the historic contributi­ons each woman made, and large text on the base reinforces the message with key words about their lives. Julia Ward Howe is honoured with a patriotic red, white and blue colour scheme, stenciled musical notes, and the words “Batle Hymn of the Republic” on the pedestal. Howe wrote the anthem ater hearing Union troops singing and marching past the Willard Hotel during the Civil War. The hotel is still in business, beside her call box.

She and others are pictured in bronze relief portraits accompanie­d by plaques describing their accomplish­ments. Bergen exploits the pipes above some of the boxes to install the painted stainless steel metalwork that further illustrate­s their stories: a woman working at a printing press for newspaper publisher Katharine Graham.

Blues and gospel musician Flora Molton is recognised with “street signs” pointing from the box toward the nearby locations where she sang. Topping off the white, purple and gold call box of suffragist Alice Paul is a metal cutout picturing the women’s rightto-vote march which she helped organise in 1913. Bergen’s work is to be inaugurate­d in early October, and Jones said the BID hopes to get funding to refurbish more call boxes next year. “I think it’s a great project,” said Carolina Kenrick, 71, a retiree passing a call box that could use a coat of paint elsewhere in Washington. “Renew them. Give them a new life,” she said. “I think it’s a positive that they’re still standing.” Washington is a state in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. Named for George Washington, the first US president, the state was made out of the western part of the Washington Territory, which was ceded by Britain in 1846 in accordance with the Oregon Treaty in the setlement of the Oregon boundary dispute. Washington is the 18th largest state, with an area of 71,362 square miles (184,827 km2), and the 13th most populous state, with more than 7.4 million people.

Washington is the showcase of American arts, home to such prestigiou­s venues as the National Theatre, the Kennedy Center and the Folger Theatre. Jazz music has a storied history here.

The city hosts several adventurou­s small theaters, like Arena Stage and Studio Theatre, that put on works by nontraditi­onal writers. The president, Congress and the Supreme Court are here, the three pillars of US government.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ↑ This combinatio­n of pictures in Washington, DC, shows old call boxes filled with art as part of the Sheridanka­lorama Call Box Restoratio­n Project by artists.
Agence France-presse ↑ This combinatio­n of pictures in Washington, DC, shows old call boxes filled with art as part of the Sheridanka­lorama Call Box Restoratio­n Project by artists.
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