Eyesore or masterpiece? Few local attractions have drawn a more polarized response than Ghost Parking Lot, a public art installation that occupied a portion of the Hamden Plaza lot along Dixwell Avenue from 1977 until its removal in 2003, by which time it had seriously deteriorated. During a visit, the only unusual feature of that same stretch of asphalt between Starbucks and Wood-n-Tap was two giant piles of sad, gray snow. Most of the spaces sat empty, and the midday winter sun did little to warm them.
Whether you loved it or hated it, you couldnโt help but notice Ghost Parking Lot. The original concept comprised 20 cars โparkedโ in spaces fronting Dixwell Avenue that, depending on your perspective, were at various stages of either sinking into or rising from the asphalt. According to a 2000 article in the New York Times, the cars โwere stripped of their interiors, sandblasted to remove exterior paint, filled with concrete to various depths, from full exposure of the body to complete burial, and then covered with a thin layer of asphalt so that the sculpture blended in with its surroundingsโthe shopping plaza parking lot. The vehicles include sedans, station wagons, convertibles and sports cars (but no SUVs).โ
โIt was built as a work of art you could not possibly put in a museum,โ Ghost artist James Wines told the Times. โIts vitality comes from being in a parking lot. We were interested in being in a situation where the people are. Art for everyone is very democratic.โ Wines is the founder of the โarchitecture and environmental arts studioโ SITE, which implements art and architectural installations worldwide using what it calls โenvironmental thinking.โ He won the 2013 National Design Award for Lifetime Achievement, among dozens of other professional awards. His work now belongs to the collections of 35 museums, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York and Centre Pompidou in Paris, according to SITEโs website.
Winesโs interred cars werenโt Hamden Plazaโs only art installations. Before George Rhoadsโs Magic Clock was set up outside a retail space that now sits unoccupied, it (or a close cousin) apparently made an appearance in the lobby at 2 World Trade Center in New York. The Times described the sculpture as a crowd-pleasing toy of sorts whose โpings, clangs, whirs, thuds and bongsโฆ emerged from the Plexiglas-enclosed gears, gongs, springs, pendulums, pans, spools, cages and saw blades, all set in motion by oversized pinballs and culminating in the squawk of a raucous cuckoo clock.โ
An informal poll of Hamdenites elicited memories of numerous other Hamden Plaza installations: a wheel outside Ashleyโs Ice Cream that, when spun, made a โmoving image of someone licking an ice cream coneโ; a piece โwith magnetic filaments that moved and changed to musicโ including โFlight of the Bumblebeeโ; an instrument made of metal tubes played with an attached mallet; a mirror array that โmade multiple reflections of you if you stood on the Xโ; a rock that moved as if on its own; and โpeltsโ made out of vehicles, such as โkiddie pedal cars, cut at the seams and laid flat like a bear skin rug.โ The plaza also boasted a billboard with the complete front of a Ford Pinto on one side and its rear on the other side as well as two murals on the buildings themselves: one with an ocean theme, the other depicting the orchards that once stood on the shopping centerโs site. This outdoor art show was curated by Hamden Plaza owner David Bermant, who also included public art in four other shopping centers he owned nationwide.
For its part, Ghost Parking Lot wasnโt art to be contemplated from a distance, and kids especially seemed to understand that. They climbed on the cars and rode their skateboards over the hillocks of submerged roofs and hoods and trunks. That was fine with Wines. But hard use, the ravages of weather and a lack of ongoing maintenance caused the installation to decay over time. Cracks opened and weeds sprung. Five cars were removed in order to widen the plaza entrance. In an attempt to clean up the site, a coat of asphalt was added without consulting Wines, glossing over details meant to be seen in the original sculpture. Wines told the Hartford Courant he would have preferred the piece to deteriorate naturally. โThat was supposed to be part of the whole thingโฆ We figured that over time, it would be destroyedโlet it fade away and the cars would be revealed again. That would be a theatrical artwork in itself.โ
In 2003, after numerous attempts to save and restore Ghost Parking Lot, the cars were exhumed and the lot repaved. Today, a panel mounted outside Marshallโs tells the story of Hamdenโs most controversial work of art, with nine photographs that document the project from installation to decline.
Most of Bermantโs other Hamden installations have gone the way of Ghost, but three survive. George Rhoadsโs kinetic sculpture Bee Tree is mounted atop the plazaโs vintage sign at the entrance nearest Starbucks. An array of silver cones on rods catches the breeze and spins like an industrial pinwheelโor, as the artist apparently would have it, like a swarm of bees.
A similar sculpture, larger and more complex in its machinations, stands front and center in the plazaโs parking lot. Unlabeled, this one too appears to be a Rhoads sculpture, titled Windamajig (1983). A tall white tower with colorful cones, Windamajig spins in a stiff breeze like a carnival ride or stands becalmed on a still day.
Only one of the shopping centerโs many sidewalk installations remains. Weeping Column (1983) is an odd concrete monolith mounted on a pedestal outside Skechers. A descriptive label identifies the artist as Clyde Lynds and references the effect of light from fiber optics, no longer operating. Like Magic Clock and the moving rock sculpture recalled by neighbors, Weeping Column appeared in the World Trade Center lobby exhibition, where one might surmise Bermant did some shopping for Hamden Plaza.
Weeping Columnโs original intent was to evoke โancient civilizations,โ which โhave left us many records of their existence, much of it inscribed on fragments of stone from the art and architecture of the time,โ according to the label posted near it today. The same now seems to be true of this 20th-century relic, which has experienced some of the decay it was designed to reflect.
Though only Bee Tree, Weeping Column and Windamajig survive as markers of Bermantโs unusual devotion to public art, Ghost Parking Lot still claims the most lasting legacy. A 2014 article in the London Observer listed it as one of the 10 best โcar parks turned into art spaces,โ calling it โpoetry in asphalt.โ Its imminent demise was mourned in Architecture magazine in 2002: โWinesโs work cross-pollinates art and architecture and has been claimed by the pop art, land art, postmodernist and conceptual art movements.โ Connecticut architect Michael J. Crosbie called Ghost Parking Lot โa hauntingly witty row of carsโ and held it up as an example of what public art is and should be.
Not everyone in Hamden was sad to see Ghost Parking Lot go. The label of โpublic artโ as applied to it and the rest of Bermantโs collection was hotly contested. But even setting aside the point that you donโt have to like something to acknowledge it as art, the decisive reactions of longtime Hamdenites asked to recall Hamden Plazaโs installation heydayโโgreat to watch,โ โfabulous,โ โloved it!โโindicate that the โpublicโ part was a rousing success.
Hamden Plaza, former site of Ghost Parking Lot
2100 Dixwell Ave, Hamden (map)
www.siteenvirodesign.com/โฆ
Written by Kathy Leonard Czepiel. Images, of Ghost Parking Lot in 1977โincluding a mid-construction shotโprovided courtesy of SITE New York. This updated story was originally published on February 28, 2019.