MACHINE PROJECT
Los Angeles, CA / 2003
Created to function as a research lab, project space and short term residency for visiting artists, the original design for Machine Project was a collaboration with C-level co-founder Mark Allen. Machine rejects the implied neutrality of the empty white cube - constructed of modular mobile living & working units, the gallery transforms itself for each exhibit and occupant.
Questions: How can one continuous space be designed both for living and for exhibiting contemporary multi-media art? How can it be as cheap and as easy to construct as possible? How do you live in a storefront? How do you live in a gallery? How can the spaces expand and contract depending on life & art at the moment? How can it accommodate the constantly changing needs of the artists that take it over?
Story: My friend Mark Allen called me one day in March. He had just rented a 1000 square foot storefront in Echo Park, on Alvarado near Sunset, next door to the Downbeat Cafe. He wanted to use it both as a gallery and a residency space for visiting artists. He is an artist plus a lot of other things (he created the light installations for a couple of the early Sundown Salon events). He co-founded the artist-run space ‘C-Level’ in Chinatown, and had run an informal gallery space out of his house while living in Houston. Asking if I might be interested in giving him some advise on his new space, I checked it out with him the next day.
Program: A place for a visiting artist to sleep, work, eat, cook, entertain, work on computers and electronics, store lots of stuff, have public events, show any sort of work.
Design: Rolling units that can accommodate any living needs occupy the space freely. They may come together to make interior spaces and define exterior spaces. They may connect through hidden passages to allow movement from one to the next. They can take on any life or art needs depending on how they are arranged. The spaces on top become a second level accessed by a mobile stair. Mark’s new favorite place to take a nap is inside this cozy stair unit. The interiors of the mobile living units will evolve over time, being customized, furnished, finished and lit according to the changing needs and desires of the art, Mark and the visiting artists. Videos will be projected on a scrim over the storefront window to allow viewing for both those inside the gallery, and the motorists stranded in traffic on Alvarado Boulevard.
Details: 1000 square foot space with 12 foot ceilings with installation made of Douglas Fir lumber, plywood, tension wire cross-bracing, and 4’ x 10’ sheets of PolyGal polycarbonate panels.
links > machine / mark allen / c-level / l.a. weekly 12.17.03 article on first show:
"Punch Tape,
Hairless Hounds and Broken Fan Belts
On a recent saturday afternoon, while a jazz combo jams at the Downbeat Café
on Alvarado in Echo Park, hipsters at the Machine gallery opening next door
sip Tecates and puzzle over the array of obsolete computing devices from the
’50s through the ’70s in Tom Jennings’ “Story Teller”
installation. Pushing a button on a black box the size of a DSL modem feeds
a reel of 1-inch-wide computer punch tape into a wooden box on a pedestal. This
box reads the tape and sends a signal to a shoebox-size wooden container on
the floor — a crude voice synthesizer that belches out barely decipherable
syllables in a clipped monotone while a clacking, waist-high Teletype machine
outputs text on sheets of 50-year-old, buff-colored paper. Modern computer chips
that Jennings has installed in each device enable the machines to communicate.
“It’s basically a multimedia system,” he says brushing a hand
over the voice synth’s surface. “A laptop beats the pants off of
this kind of computer. But this is made of stuff you can touch.” An aging
punk rocker, Jennings has a thin white goatee, ears stacked with silver hoops,
and arms covered with tattoos that reveal his deep love of computing and its
history. On his left forearm he has the International Telegraphic Alphabet;
on his right is the FIELDATA precursor to the American Standard Code for Information
Interchange. A renowned computer programmer, hacker, artist and queer activist,
Jennings created the Homocore zine and, in 1984, FidoNet, the first public bulletin
board and a forerunner of the modern Internet.
The octopus-like physical network in front of us tells an eight-hour story about
Alan Turing, the legendary gay British code breaker and mathematician. Nearby,
Jennings’ canine duo, Dart (a Mexican hairless) and Molly (a moon-eyed
Peruvian hairless with a white Mohawk), play close to the front window. Dart
nips Molly in the leg, and the pair take off running past a portrait of Turing,
the only art on the gallery’s walls.
“Almost all spaces dealing with new technology look like the Mac store,”
says Mark Allen, the artist who created Machine and designed the space with
the architect Fritz Haeg. “I’m against the idea that you have to
have money and corporate backing to do something with technology.” Jennings
and his low-tech “Story Teller” installation perfectly embody this
ethos. Allen’s choice of a daytime opening was intentional. “I figured
if we had the opening during the day, more people might come to check out the
art instead of just to drink the free beer.”
His strategy pays off. Art fans, friends, and people from the Downbeat and the
33 1/3 bookstore steadily stream in and out of the gallery all afternoon while
Molly and Dart play tag between the crowds’ legs.
Allen is a founding member of the C-Level collective, a group of artists who
have gained notoriety for their video game–based performance pieces that
interrogate the relationship between humans and technology. The modular Machine
space will showcase similar technology-related installations and sculptures,
on an ongoing basis.
“The ‘Story Teller’ story is fine, but it unfolds very slowly,”
Jennings shouts over the buzz of the crowd. “I have something that’s
tangentially related, but it’s only 18 minutes and it’s much more
chatty.” As he hand-winds punch tape, he admires his antique computers.
“The Teletype machine cost the price of a small car in 1960, but they
would run for 20 years. Now you spend two grand on a laptop, and it’s
gone in 18 months.” But as Jennings knows, old school isn’t always
more reliable. A Western Union telegraph printer and a graph plotter Jennings
has modified to output handwriting are connected to the network but aren’t
functioning. “The fan belt isn’t working,” Jennings says as
he tinkers with the plotter. “You just get done in by the dumbest stuff.”
—Andrew Vontz"