Many snow. Amaze sculpture. Wow. Very scarf. Much photographs by Benjamin Freed.
Rather than hurl chunks of snow and ice at each other, the twee folks behind the Facebook-organized snowball fights in Dupont Circle whenever Washington gets hit with a snowstorm decided today’s fresh blanket was too wet and heavy for a volley. Instead, they told their would-be combatants to participate in a sculpture contest.
The resulting sculptures were actually satisfyingly creative. Some teams won prizes for their works, like Dave Steadman and Daphne Kiplinger, nearby residents who won a $50 gift certificate to Bar Dupont for “Snobama,” a snowman that looks not-at-all like the President (OK, maybe the ears), but was decked out with a campaign button, necktie, and miniature US flag. Steadman and Kiplinger had a long line of people waiting for a photo with their sculpture, including DC Council member Muriel Bowser, who was the only mayoral candidate to take up the organizers’ invitation.
Steadman asked some in his crowd if the snowstorm has a social-media friendly name. Someone mentioned that the Washington Post is promoting “Snochi” to play off the Winter Olympics. Someone else asked why snowstorms need names. But Steadman said his wife likes snow puns.
“Snobody doesn’t like a snow pun,” Kiplinger said, with not even a flake of irony.
Other sculptures that were still intact about 2 PM ranged from frosty replicas of Washington landmarks, creatively posed snowmen, and even some internet memes.
Dave Steadman and Daphne Kiplinger with “Snobama.”
Quite the hefty snowman, with Oreos for eyes, teeth, and buttons.
Somebody doesn’t want their shirt back.
The medal is from the Akron, Ohio Road Runner Marathon, but we’ll give it a 7.5 for Olympic spirit.
This seems more appropriate for an Adams Morgan snowman contest.
It snowed once. It was horrible.
There’s a metaphor for the legislative branch somewhere in here.
Benjamin Freed joined Washingtonian in August 2013 and covers politics, business, and media. He was previously the editor of DCist and has also written for Washington City Paper, the New York Times, the New Republic, Slate, and BuzzFeed. He lives in Adams Morgan.
Snow Turns Dupont Circle Into Sculpture Garden (Photos)
A snow day unleashes DC residents’ creative talents.
Rather than hurl chunks of snow and ice at each other, the twee folks behind the Facebook-organized snowball fights in Dupont Circle whenever Washington gets hit with a snowstorm decided today’s fresh blanket was too wet and heavy for a volley. Instead, they told their would-be combatants to participate in a sculpture contest.
The resulting sculptures were actually satisfyingly creative. Some teams won prizes for their works, like Dave Steadman and Daphne Kiplinger, nearby residents who won a $50 gift certificate to Bar Dupont for “Snobama,” a snowman that looks not-at-all like the President (OK, maybe the ears), but was decked out with a campaign button, necktie, and miniature US flag. Steadman and Kiplinger had a long line of people waiting for a photo with their sculpture, including DC Council member Muriel Bowser, who was the only mayoral candidate to take up the organizers’ invitation.
Steadman asked some in his crowd if the snowstorm has a social-media friendly name. Someone mentioned that the Washington Post is promoting “Snochi” to play off the Winter Olympics. Someone else asked why snowstorms need names. But Steadman said his wife likes snow puns.
“Snobody doesn’t like a snow pun,” Kiplinger said, with not even a flake of irony.
Other sculptures that were still intact about 2 PM ranged from frosty replicas of Washington landmarks, creatively posed snowmen, and even some internet memes.
See also: More photos of snow!
Benjamin Freed joined Washingtonian in August 2013 and covers politics, business, and media. He was previously the editor of DCist and has also written for Washington City Paper, the New York Times, the New Republic, Slate, and BuzzFeed. He lives in Adams Morgan.
Most Popular in News & Politics
5 Things to Know About This Weekend’s Inaugural Balls
This Time, Metro Will Offer a Full-Blown Trump Inauguration SmarTrip Card
DC Demonstrations and Protests Planned Around Trump’s Second Inauguration
Inauguration Road Closures: The Very Long List of DC Streets to Avoid This Weekend
This DC Inauguration Day Event Encourages People to “Take Edibles and Come”
Washingtonian Magazine
January Issue: He's Back
View IssueSubscribe
Follow Us on Social
Follow Us on Social
Related
A Biography of Perle Mesta Sheds Light on a Famed DC Figure
Inside the Library of Congress’s Artificial-Aging Lab
Guest List: 5 People We’d Love to Hang Out With This January
Paula Whyman’s New Book Is About an Ecology Project From Hell
More from News & Politics
Donald Trump’s Inauguration Will Be Indoors
Workers at Some of DC’s Best-Known Restaurants Move to Unionize
Elon Musk and Hulk Hogan Will Speak at Trump Rally, DC Could Get a Bottle Deposit Program, and the US Will Send Ambassadors to Hollywood
Playbook’s New Author Is “Used to Chaos and Turmoil and Change”
Jason Aldean Is Among Inauguration Musical Guests, There’s House Intrigue Over Ukraine, and Lots of People Are Buying Mansions
What Trump’s Return Means for DC
What Snow Could Mean for Inauguration Day
4 Surprising Moments in the Compass Coffee Lawsuit