Indiana’s columns, like his herms, were made from remnants of the shipping trade. Originally masts of old sailing ships, they were later used in maritime buildings built after the Great Fire of 1835. Indiana painted stenciled words around the perimeter of these columns, in this instance the names of eight significant places where he lived, turning the column into a geographical retrospective of his life. At the bottom is New Castle (Indiana), the city of his birth, and at the top Vinalhaven (Maine), where he resided from 1978 until his death in 2018. In between are Indianapolis, Chicago, Skowhegan, and Edinburgh, places where he studied art, and Coenties Slip and The Bowery, where his studios in New York City were located.