6324 x 4108 px | 53,5 x 34,8 cm | 21,1 x 13,7 inches | 300dpi
Aufnahmedatum:
20. August 2022
Ort:
The Blackpool Tower, The Promenade, Blackpool, Lancashire, England, UK, FY1 4BJ
Weitere Informationen:
Comedy Carpet (2011), Blackpool: reportedly Britain's largest piece of public art, an area of 2, 200m2 or 1, 800m2 (sources vary) on Festival Headland on the promenade, opposite Blackpool Tower. It shows jokes and punchlines from comedians who have performed in Blackpool over the decades, totalling 160, 000 letters. Each letter is cut from granite and inset in white concrete, in a variety of typefaces. Five months after it was opened, the local council controversially removed part of the work because viewers were thought to be in danger of stepping backwards into the path of trams. The work earned Young the 2012 Marsh Award for Excellence in Public Sculpture. and in 2014 was joint winner of the International Society of Typographic Designers' International Typographic Award Visible through the glass floor of the Tower Eye on the promenade some 380 ft (120 m) below, is Blackpool's famous Comedy Carpet. In front of the tower, the Comedy Carpet by Gordon Young is a celebration of the resort's long comedic history in the form of a visual pavement of jokes and catchphrases, embedded into the surface of the revamped promenade. From above, it is easy to read the eternal catchphrase of the late Sir Bruce Forsyth, "Nice to see you - to see you... nice!"