Darkened Anaheim motel signs join Museum of Neon Art’s electrified collection

Neon lights shining in the dark of night were once a beacon for weary travelers, but then bigger, more modern hotels replaced the popularity of the roadside motels of Anaheim’s past.

But as the Silver Moon Motel, the Sandman Motel, the Americana Motel were torn down for new developments, their neon signs were tucked away in a city yard – left to gather dust.

Until they were recently wrapped up and delivered to a warehouse belonging to the Museum of Neon Art in Glendale, where they will join other relics of Southern California’s lighted past.

But they won’t be gathering dust. Soon the warehouse, located in Pomona, will become a second exhibit space for the museum, opening to the public in 2023, said Corrie Siegel, executive director of the museum, which has been curating and collecting neon art for more than three decades.

Before learning of the museum’s work preserving neon signs, Anaheim officials had relegated the signs to storage because they seemed to have “outlived their usefulness,” city spokesman Mike Lyster said. The city lacked the funding to bring the signs back to their former glory, so they just sat there, some for 20 years.

  • The Silver Moon Motel sign blue and red with a...

    The Silver Moon Motel sign blue and red with a crescent moon that was saved from the 2002 demolition of the Beach Boulevard motel, which Anaheim officials said had outlived its usefulness as lodging and today is part of a site set for redevelopment as housing, including affordable housing, with some retail. (Courtesy of Museum of Neon Art)

  • The Silver Moon Motel on Beach Boulevard once featured a...

    The Silver Moon Motel on Beach Boulevard once featured a large blue and red sign with a crescent moon. (Courtesy of Museum of Neon Art)

  • The Sandman Motel’s large blue sign and the 5 Points...

    The Sandman Motel’s large blue sign and the 5 Points Liquor Market’s a blue and red sign with a directional arrow were recently hauled up to the Museum of Neon Art. The motel was demolished in 2018 and replaced by El Verano affordable apartments for seniors and the former liquor store and market was on Lincoln Avenue near the 5 Freeway. (Courtesy of Museum of Neon Art)

  • The Silver Moon Motel sign blue and red with a...

    The Silver Moon Motel sign blue and red with a crescent moon that was saved from the 2002 demolition of the Beach Boulevard motel, which Anaheim officials said had outlived its usefulness as lodging and today is part of a site set for redevelopment as housing, including affordable housing, with some retail. (Courtesy of Museum of Neon Art)

of

Expand

The museum folks, who had assumed the roadside signs were long gone, offered a space and know-how for the pieces to shine bright for the public again, he said.

“For a moment it was kind of like the holy grail,” Siegel said of the discovery the signs had been set aside. Another sign, from the former Five Points Liquor Market near Santa Ana, had also been saved and has been sent to the warehouse.

The signs represent a typical American story of economic decline throughout the late 20th century, she said, noting that neon was the “height of technology and class” in the 1920s.

When these motels were in their heyday, Lyster said tourists would drive down Beach Boulevard, the main route to the ocean before freeways, witnessing the “proliferation of mid-century neon.”

By the 1980s and 1990s, fewer tourists were interested in their lodgings and the smaller motels had to “resort to whatever they had to,” in supporting themselves, Lyster said of their transition to pseudo-housing. As they became homes of last resort for many, the city also saw an increase in crime and drug activity that it is now trying to address with redevelopment efforts along Beach Boulevard.

And, Siegel sees an opportunity to usher in a “resurgence” of neon art with the museum’s public opening of its warehouse in Pomona.

The museum holds nearly 200 neon relics in its collection – already on display is the iconic sign from Anaheim’s now-shuttered La Palma Chicken Pie Shop – made possible several years ago by funds from an anonymous donor.

Also glowing in its collection is the green Monty’s sign from Monty’s Steakhouse in Pasadena, the seal bouncing a ball on its nose from the Seal Beach Hotel once in the Orange County city, a Van de Kamp’s Bakery neon windmill and the Grauman’s Chinese Theatre Dragon.

Siegel said she hopes the museum’s expansion to using the warehouse as a public space, will allow the display of some cool signs that have been too large for the museum’s Glendale galleries.

The Museum of Neon Art was founded in 1981 by two artists, including Richard Jenkins who had starting collecting neon signs while still in high school.

“There was also a community behind them that was recognizing that these cultural treasures in our landscape were being removed and treated as trash by society,” Siegel said.

By the 1980s, neon was becoming more commonplace, she said, and it was being associated more with the nightlife of Las Vegas and “moral decline,” than Main Street America.

“They were rescuing signs before they could be sent to the scrap yard, and talking to mom and pop businesses, urging them to donate the signs to them rather than throw them away,” Siegel said.

Today, the museum offers several exhibits on neon as an art medium and its place in local history and cultural.

“There are small little stories about the people behind some of our signs,” she said. “It also speaks to how each visitor to our museum has a story, and each person that passes by a neon sign has a unique and individual perspective.”

The museum also hosts double-decker bus tours, taking visitors out into the Los Angeles area to look at the neon art that still exists. They are “one part stand-up comedy, and one part cultural history,” Siegel said.

“These tours are like these love letters to an ever-changing Los Angeles,” she said, noting that on almost every tour, she hears about a new art site that has popped up.

Neon artists also share the experience of bending and creating with the colorful glass tubing in one-day and weekly classes hosted at the museum – more classes are planned at warehouse.

Siegel said she sees the warehouse as a continuation of the museum’s legacy.

“It’s just now that a lot of the cities are realizing they lost something when they took these signs away,” she said. “The fact that the city of Anaheim found a place to give these signs to is a remarkable story of city government doing what’s right for preservation.”

Museum of Neon Art

When: Noon-7 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays; Noon-5 p.m. Sundays

Where: 216 S. Brand Blvd., Glendale

Cost: $10 general admission

Information: neonmona.org

from Signage https://ift.tt/wMYaivN
via Irvine Sign Company

from Signage https://ift.tt/IjzJ3VZ
via Irvine Sign Company

from Signage https://ift.tt/mwbMQVX
via Irvine Sign Company

from Signage https://ift.tt/2n79Xpo
via Irvine Sign Company