Asbury Park Casino Art Installation

Asbury Park Casino Art Installation 4,0/5 4344 reviews

At this point I’m sure everyone has seen the new art installation in the casino. It’s absolutely beautiful, and another great addition to our City By The Sea curated by Jenn Hampton and the Wooden Walls Project. The brilliant artist is HOTTEA, who is actually Eric Rieger, originally a street artist from Minneapolis. The title of this masterpiece is “One Last Moment Under The Sky.”

  1. Asbury Park Casino Art Installation 2019

The enormous Art Deco casino on the Jersey Shore in Asbury Park bore witness to the full range of human emotions for the better part of 75 years until it, along with many of its neighboring structures, succumbed to the inexorable force of eroding shorelines, urban renewal and redevelopment. (images via: LennyNJ and Shira Daniels). If you want to learn more about the installation, I found a couple great articles and have linked to them below. Windswept Public Art at the Beach: Hot Tea’s New Installation in Asbury Park, BSA May 29,2019; HOTTEA’s Temporary Installation in Asbury Park, NJ is Absolutely Fantastic, Street Depts May 29, 2019. Asbury Underground is a major festival held in the downtown business district of Asbury Park every October and January. The Underground is an art and music “crawl” that includes some 30 venues hosting over 100 shows featuring performances by singer-songwriters, spoken word artists and comics. Asbury Park Casino, 2015 Postcard (Left) Jason Stumpf, photographer Porkchop, mural.

If you haven’t seen it, check it out in the Casino building the next time you’re in Asbury Park and watch it come to life on a windy day. For more of this artists work you can find him on Instagram @hotxtea.

If you want to learn more about the installation, I found a couple great articles and have linked to them below.

  • Windswept Public Art at the Beach: Hot Tea’s New Installation in Asbury Park, BSA May 29,2019
  • HOTTEA’s Temporary Installation in Asbury Park, NJ is Absolutely Fantastic, Street Depts May 29, 2019
Asbury park casino art installations

Writer’s Workshop: The Artist’s Way

January 30, 2020

The Artist’s Way – A Writers Workshop.

January 16, 2020

Inspiring Creativity in a Silent World

April 23, 2020

2020 JerseyArts.com People’s Choice Awards Ballot

February 6, 2020

MindTravel: A Space Odyssey in Asbury Park

August 29, 2019

Wooden Walls

September 19, 2018

Asbury Park Casino

(image via: Unbillable Hours)

The enormous Art Deco casino on the Jersey Shore in Asbury Park bore witness to the full range of human emotions for the better part of 75 years until it, along with many of its neighboring structures, succumbed to the inexorable force of eroding shorelines, urban renewal and redevelopment.

(images via: LennyNJ and Shira Daniels)

Since it’s sometimes difficult to discern when demolition ends and rebuilding begins, we’ll think positively and assume accounts that developers are incorporating the casino’s iconic steel grate facade into whatever its replacement turns out to be. If so, that would be a “grate” tribute to the casino’s rich (for some) history.

Lyric Casino, Yuma AZ

(image via: TrekEarth/Travelyurt)

It might be 3:10 to Yuma but the odds of the Lyric Casino welcoming visitors from near or far are about a billion to one. Displaying sun-faded hints of its turquoise and gold former glory on its curious movie theater style entrance facade, this casino’s better days have long since passed it and everyone else by.

Jubilation Casino

(images via: Sarah_G)

Judging by the trashed interior, scattered slot machines and general state of disrepair both inside and out, it’s reasonable to expect the good ship Jubilation is steadily edging towards termination. Formerly the Cotton Club casino boat operating out of Greenville MS, the Jubilation Casino opened in December of 1995 and closed just over 7 months later… failure to legally maintain minimum bankroll requirements to cover payments on table games and slot machines caused the Mississippi Gaming Commission to pull the plug… not literally, of course, as that would sink the ship.

(image via: Fujoshi)

Kudos to Flickr user Fujoshi who visited the docked hulk of the S.S. Jubilation in the steamy summer of 2011 to snap the image above… hey Cap’n, you’re supposed to roll the dice, not the boat!

Kings Inn Casino, Reno NV

(images via: REreno and Washington Lights)

If the casino itself is unlucky, you can bet suspicious gamblers will give it a wide berth. Such was the case with the Kings Inn Casino, crippled by ownership issues and an employee strike before it could even open its doors back in 1974. Open it did, for a while at least, before declaring bankruptcy in 1981 and closing for good in 1986.

(image via: AroundCarson)

Asbury Park Casino Art Installation 2019

Over the next quarter-century, the Kings Inn was flipped from one financially-challenged owner to another while the bean-counters at Reno City Hall waited in vain for hundreds of thousands of dollars in delinquent property taxes. At least the derelict downtown building has been semi-appealingly boarded up, so it’s got that going for it, which is nice.