A Sight Glass was used for viewing the fuel flowing through this rusting 1950s era Bennett 766 gas pump in Coger, Oklahoma.
focal length: 44mm | exposure: f/11 – 1/1000th second – ISO 500
A Sight Glass was used for viewing the fuel flowing through this rusting 1950s era Bennett 766 gas pump in Coger, Oklahoma.
A pre-World War II Bennett 541 gas pump stands as an unattended sentry in Cogar, Oklahoma. The 80 year-old age-value monument, saturated with rusty patina, displays a sales price of 37.9-cents per gallon of leaded gasoline.
The W.S. Kelly General Merchandise building stands at the intersection of Oklahoma 37 and Oklahoma 152 as an Age-value monument to the America of the 1950s. Age-value in a monument betrays itself at once in the monument’s dated appearance and makes explicit a sense of the life cycle of the artifact, and of culture as a whole.1 This oxidized metal and faded paint became a ground for scenes in the 1988 cross country road trip movie Rain Man. Three subsequent decades of brutal midwest plains weather have enhanced saturation of the site’s representative rusty patina.