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Mobster-themed window display featuring Lucky Luciano & Al Capone. Surf Avenue, Coney Island. June 28, 2012. Photo © Tricia Vita/me-myself-i via flickr

On the north side of Coney Island’s Surf Avenue, the florist with the surreal Roman centurion window display that we photographed last year has morphed into a party planner with a hokey mobster-themed window display. Al Capone earned his infamous nickname “Scarface” in 1917 after getting slashed in a fight at Coney Island’s Harvard Inn. Charles “Lucky” Luciano became mob boss soon after inviting Joe “The Boss” Masseria to lunch at Nuova Villa Tammaro on West 15th Street, where Joe got rubbed out in 1931. Photos of the two mobsters (and an unidentified third man) along with faux bags of loot, bootleg liquor and getaway car are part of the window display across the street from Luna Park. May we suggest that in addition to the bar/batmitzvahs and sweet sixteen parties, the party planners open up a wax museum a la Lillie Santangelo’s World in Wax Musee? If you’re too young to remember it, watch Charles Ludlam’s silent horror short “The Museum of Wax,” shot in the late 1970s.

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July 6, 2012: Photo of the Day: Art on the Move in Coney Island

April 13, 2012: Photo of the Day: Catch 1 Ball Win This Prize

August 8, 2011: Photo of the Day: Across the Street from the Cyclone

June 30, 2011: Photo of the Day: Mermaid Avenue at Dusk

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Clock & Chute, Philomena Marano

Clock & Chute, Limited Edition Print by Philomena Marano on W 12th Street, Coney Island. June 9, 2012. Photo © Tricia Vita/me-myself-i via flickr

On a recent Saturday, ATZ happened to see “Clock & Jump” by Philomena Marano, walking down 12th Street in Coney Island. We caught up with the artwork in front of a souvenir stand. It’s a limited edition print— one of 200 — made from the original papier collé, which is Philomena’s forte. The Clock in the print is the Coca Cola clock on a billboard that was a Boardwalk fixture in the 1950s and ’60s. The Jump is of course the landmark Parachute Jump, the sole survivor of Steeplechase Park.

“Coney Island has needed a clock since the hands fell off the Coca Cola clock some time ago. I guess in the late 70′s,” said Philomena in a comment on one of our previous posts about her work (“Art of the Day: Play Fascination by Philomena Marano,” ATZ, September 19, 2010). The face of the clock and the billboard are also long gone. “Philip and I are thinking about how to propose the clock project, seriously.”

In 2004, the artist teamed up with architect Philip Tusa to propose “A Pavilion with a Magic Clock” for the Van Alen Institute’s Parachute Pavilion design competition for Coney Island. There were 864 entries and cash awards of $18,000, but none of the entries won the commission to design the pavilion at Steeplechase Plaza.

Marano and Tusa gave their concept another go in 2008, when the Municipal Art Society asked the public to “Imagine Coney.” The section of their proposal titled “Reestablish Massive Clock” envisioned a clock that pays homage to Steeplechase with “a little Tilyou man at center, whose arms act as the arms of the clock and then will spin frantically every hour on the hour, perhaps accompanied by some whirring or whizzing sound.”

Philomena’s Magic Clock presented at BAM, November 17, 2008. Municipal Art Society Imagine Coney Island Idea #131 by Philip Tusa, Architect & Philomena Marano, Artist. Photo © Philip Tusa via flickr

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June 21,2012: Photo Album: Mermaid Avenue Murals and Public Art

June 8, 2012: Art of the Day: Steve Powers New Signs for Coney Island

October 26, 2010: Studio Visit: Philomena Marano of the Coney Island Hysterical Society

October 4, 2009: The Wonder of Artist Philomena Marano’s Wonder Wheel

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Mangels Pony Cart Ride at Deno’s Kiddie Park, Coney Island. August 29, 2008. Photo © Tricia Vita/me-myself-i via flickr

Fourth of July calls up memories of riding a Mangels pony cart on the carny kids float in a smalltown parade. When Colbert’s Fiesta played Manomet, Massachusetts for the Fourth, the carnival once made a float bedecked with Pony Carts from the Mangels Pony Cart Ride. The little carny kids, including me, got to ride in the carts on the float, wearing our Sunday best. I remember being awestruck by the teenage girls who suddenly looked like fairy princesses in their prom gowns and tiaras. We flung candy and carnival prizes to the crowd.

This classic pony cart ride at Deno’s Kiddie Park was manufactured a few blocks away at the Mangels Factory on 8th Street in Coney Island, which is now the Deptartment of Motor Vehicles Building. William F. Mangels also invented the Whip, which we had on the carnival too. Happy Memories and Happy Fourth of July!

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Related posts on ATZ…

May 18, 2012: Rare & Vintage: Pinto Bros. Pony Cart from Coney Island

April 20, 2012: Photo of the Day: Eldorado Auto Skooter Marquee

February 1, 2011: Bring Back the Whip! A Birthday Gift for William F Mangels

May 21, 2009: Astroland Closed But Your Kid Can Still Ride the USS Astroland This Summer!

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