Thursday, May 21, 2020

Amusement Park Art and Century Flyers

This is a little bit of a different post for here, but I hope that you still enjoy it! I'm not artistic whatsoever, but there are ways for even non-artistic people to make something that looks moderately okay, especially with computers and the ability to print out or create templates. In middle school art class, I took advantage of several "open-ended" art projects to make something as a tribute to some of my favorite amusement parks and attractions. No matter how crude these may be, I really enjoy having them as decorations.
This is my favorite, although it is admittedly super dorky. (Who am I kidding; the teacher or any of my friends probably had no idea what I was doing!) :-D Of course, these are the original symbols from EPCOT Center: the whole park with logo, CommuniCore, Living Seas, Imagination, Horizons, Land, Spaceship Earth, and World of Motion. The idea behind this project was to create "wind chimes," and the whole thing, about two feet tall, is made out of clay.
I made them by placing a piece of paper as an outline over the clay and then carving the shapes out, like Land and Imagination, or by adding material bas-relief style, like Spaceship Earth and the big symbol. I realize now that if I had switched Imagination and Living Seas, the arrangement would be the same as they actually are at the park! I forgot to put a hole in the World of Motion symbol, so that one doesn't hang with the rest. I wanted to include Universe of Energy, but I found it difficult to make concentric circles, so that piece got thrown away.
I'm a fan of these symbols because they aren't seen at the park today. With the reinvention of Epcot, Disney is planning to return some of them to Future World along with variants for the new attractions.
I cranked up the color a little bit on my 6th grade printmaking project of the Horizons symbol. The funny thing about this is that every kid gets to stick his or her stamp on a ceiling tile, so one of my Horizons symbols will be left behind for years to come on the school. I also made a multi-color printmaking sheet in 7th grade of Pretzel darkride cars.
Aside from Disney, I have made a couple tributes to my local amusement parks, as well. This is for the Blue Streak at Conneaut Lake Park in NW Pennsylvania. A cool logo was created for the ride's 75th anniversary in 2013 and placed on the station. Using "Perler Beads," which are small plastic beads that can be ironed together, I created a huge template of the logo, made of thousands of beads. It's more than two feet long, so I think that it's a miracle that I somehow didn't ruin this by spilling the beads over the months I worked on it at school.
Blue Streak is one of my favorite ever coasters. I love this ride so much that it's my profile pic. I like its story of survival, having been through many years of standing-but-not-operating status, and it is also such a quirky old ride. It's smooth, yet the bumps are different every go-around and really add to the experience. The classic trains that the ride operated with were given the factory name "Century Flyer" when they were manufactured in the mid-century. 
They are definitely relics from the time period, so I decided to make my own not-quite-proportionate tribute to the front headlight design, which is about half a foot by half a foot.
There were better days on the Blue Streak train when the headlights weren't busted out and the stainless steel was gleaming. Take this 1997 picture, found on a website of the American Coaster Enthusiasts.
Strangely, the three parks in the world that still run this style of train are all in PA and West Virginia. This is Kennywood's Thunderbolt, which has removed the center headlight altogether in exchange for the ride logo.

Still, though, the Century Flyer is my favorite roller coaster train ever. Okay, that's enough rambling about something unrelated for now. Thanks for reading!

11 comments:

"Lou and Sue" said...

Fun post, Andrew! I enjoyed reading about (and seeing) your art projects. Art was always my favorite class/subject, but I sure wasn't as creative as you. In high school, my girlfriend and I joined the Art Club - just so we could get our picture taken together for the year book. Right after the picture was taken we quit the club. But we succeeded in getting our picture together in the yearbook. :)

TokyoMagic! said...

Andrew, your art projects are super cool! And that's pretty neat that your print/stamp will be on display indefinitely, on a ceiling tile at the school.

I was always trying to incorporate something Disney-related into my art projects, beginning all the way back in in elementary school. I took a ceramics class during my sophomore year of high school. There was an assignment where we had to make a structure or building out of clay. Everyone pretty much just made "houses." I asked the instructor if I could make a replica of Disneyland's Matterhorn and explained to him that it was "a structure." He gave me the "okay" for it, so that is what I made!

Andrew said...

School clubs are only good for yearbook pictures, Sue, so I totally don't blame you. ;-) I sometimes enjoyed art class, but it was never my favorite.

I'd love to see how your Matterhorn turned out, TokyoMagic! I can just imagine: house, house, MATTERHORN, house, house, house. I'm guessing that you still have it? You should've left a hole in the top so you could put a Christmas star there. Thanks for the comment!

"Lou and Sue" said...

Andrew and TokyoMagic! You just invented a great Christmas decoration for us Disney fans. A ceramic Matterhorn with the light up star. I’d buy one for myself, and more for gifts!

TokyoMagic! said...

Andrew, I do still have my ceramic Matterhorn. It's in my mom's garage. I should go get it and photograph it. I didn't put a hole in the top for a star (although, I should have!), but I did make it so the top lifted off and you could pour water into it and have it come out holes near the top of the waterfalls. I also used broken bits of blue glass at the base of the waterfalls and in the "splash down" pools. The glass melted when fired in the kiln, so after cooling, it looked like water.

Sue, hmmmm....that is a good idea!

Andrew said...

SO COOL, TokyoMagic!

Brendan W. said...

Nice job, Andrew! I really like the Epcot art, being the Disney superfan that I am. I don't know if you are into Disney Pins at all but there are some really cool pins and merchandise from the Epcot35 celebration that took place two or three years ago. Great job!

Andrew said...

You found the blog, Brendan! I have a couple of pins my aunt got me when she went to Disneyland. When I went to WDW in 2018, they had a lot of the Epcot 35 merchandise on sale, so I got a few things, including a button and a shirt. I'm glad that you liked this!

Chuck said...

These are awesome, Andrew!

I love the story of your EPCOT mobile and your teacher and friends having no idea what you were doing. I had similar experiences in 7th grade art.

On one project, we had to do repeating patterns, with a center of interest and/or variation. Mine was based on WW I aircraft roundels, with my COE/variation being the replacement of one repeating British roundel with a French one (which is the same design but reverses the blue and red elements).

On another one, I did a picture of a dilapidated haunted mansion, complete with dead trees, backlit by a full moon that was heavily inspired by this piece of concept art and this album cover.

Nobody had a clue as to what I was referencing in either project, but the teacher loved them for their "originality."

Like TM!, I love the idea that your Horizons logo will be on display for decades to come.

Speaking of TM!, that Matterhorn you made sounds really cool. I'd love to see it, too.

Andrew said...

Those are some interesting projects, Chuck. We had the option to do the COE thing with our printmaking, but I went for the color pattern instead, even though I think it would look better the other way now. That Haunted Mansion art is very famous and is definitely a great choice for an art project. Thanks for the links, and thanks for reading!

Melissa said...

Infinitely better than anything I ever made in middle school!