Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility

Pressure washers clean up Unconditional Surrender

The Sarasota bayfront's iconic "kissing sailor" statue got hosed down Tuesday morning.


  • By
  • | 11:31 a.m. August 2, 2016
A Gorilla Kleen employee works to clean the Unconditional Surrender statue on Sarasota's bayfront.
A Gorilla Kleen employee works to clean the Unconditional Surrender statue on Sarasota's bayfront.
  • Sarasota
  • News
  • Share

Visitors to one of Sarasota’s most identifiable landmarks may have found themselves in a splash zone Tuesday morning, as crews worked to pressure clean the Unconditional Surrender statue.

Workers from Sarasota-based pressure-washing company Gorilla Kleen began the process at 8:30 a.m., with founder of the city’s public art fund, Tom Savage, on site to witness the clean-up effort. 

Workers spray the bayfront artwork as part of a pressure-cleaning effort Tuesday morning.
Workers spray the bayfront artwork as part of a pressure-cleaning effort Tuesday morning.

John Cloud, the owner of Gorilla Kleen, said he believes the 26-foot-tall statue hadn’t been cleaned since it was temporarily removed for repairs after a car crashed into it. Although it might not seem obvious to visitors to Unconditional Surrender, Cloud said the artwork had accumulated its share of grime over the years.

Based on the progress so far this morning, Cloud believed the bayfront icon should be refreshed once the pressure washing is completed.

“Anything near a road gets dirty,” Cloud said. “Fortunately, it’s cleaning up really well.”

This article has been updated. A previous version incorrectly stated Tom Savage was the owner of Unconditional Surrender.

 

Latest News