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November 10th, 2011:

Brooklyn Photographer Captures Relics of a Bygone Era by Caitlin McNamara – Brooklyn Eagle

In ever-changing New York City, the old often falls to make way for the new. One instance of this is the slow but accelerating disappearance of the fading “ghost” advertisements, those signs painted on walls, often high above the city’s sidewalks, offering curious glimpses to the observant into a culture of the past.

Frank Jump has been passionately documenting these ads for 20 years, since his discovery of the Omega Oil ads in Harlem. For Jump, the ads have become “a metaphor for survival… as many of these ads have long outlived their expected life span.”

Although this project isn’t directly about HIV/AIDS, Jump likens his fading ad photo campaign to his more than 25-year survival with HIV. On his website he writes, “It is no accident I’ve chosen to document such a transitory and evanescent subject.”

Frank Jump (left) and husband Aiosa at at the National Equality March for LGBT Rights in Washington on Oct. 11, 2009. taken by B. Snow

A New York native, Jump has lived with his husband, Vincenzo Aiosa, in Brooklyn since 1989. Jump continues to document these “ghost ads” today, and regularly updates his blog on the same topic [www.fadingad.com]. – CLICK HERE TO READ MORE!

Nether Street Art – Baltimore, MD

Girl with red bra strap & fedora: Chase & Clay - © Nether Street Art - CLICK FOR LARGER IMAGE

Orleans & Collington - © Nether Street Art - CLICK FOR LARGER IMAGE

Walls of Fame - Secret Bridge Spot - © Nether Street Art - CLICK FOR LARGER IMAGE

Vacant Rowhomes - Whitelocke Avenue - © Nether Street Art - CLICK FOR LARGER IMAGE

Wyman Park Bridge - © Nether Street Art - CLICK FOR LARGER IMAGE

Artist: Nether
Photographer: Nether
City: Baltimore

Bio: NETHER is a urban art campaign that hopes to impact and beautify BMORE’s bleakness through vibrant street art with the hopes of evoking public discussion. The pieces that are wheatpasted to the chosen (usually vacant) surfaces directly comment on the city and the forces that have brought it to it’s shameful state.

Nether sees his work as a force that solidifies people’s connections to locations in the city that are distinctly Baltimore. He tries to reclaim and recycle the tragic landscape. This city is a place that is simultaneously loved and hated for bringing both contentment and fear, anger and joy; it’s vibe is a permeating force that becomes part of every mind experiencing it’s poetic chaos. The intention is to relentlessly pursue capturing that beauty in the mundane, that excitement in the fear, and whatever force brings out the orange and purple as a heart- felt declaration of true Bmore pride. OWN.YOUR.CITY  – Nether