Sunday, October 21, 2007

If I had a hammer...I'd blow out glassblock!


Justin went to town on the existing broken glass blocks. Wish I had a pic of his beaming face.

New Toy: Seafoam Vespa

I got a great new prop for the space/dream come true.

I've wanted this exact bike since I saw a woman in Florence in 1998 riding one with matching riding gloves. I have fantasies of riding the backroads out to Montauk, but they may have to wait til the spring (as will the necessary repairs, insurance, and lessons!). I got it from a neighbor who brought it over from Vietnam. It is in great exterior condition but unknown mechanical condition.

Dirty Softbox!

We got down to grime removal today. Brooke mopped the floor 3 (or 4?) times and we did some serious excavations on the windows.

Brooke found a birdnest in an old vent box, now with wires cut and sealed up. The birds were going crazy right outside as we were cleaning around it. A great pad, for sure, with a cartoon-like birdnest inside protected by old vent flaps. It reminded me of a show being organized right now about displacement. Damn those newcomers driving out existing tenants.

Saturday, October 20, 2007

scavenging

We used to say that the guys who used to pick up scrap metal in the alleys of Chicago were "Chicago's Metropolitan Recycling Program." Dan Peterman and Chicago Resource Center took that to heart when they helped organize these guys and get them more reliable vehicles.

Scavenging is the orginal form of reuse/recycle that happens when you are thrifty (read: broke). I got these SWEET casters from my neighbor to help with the first moveable wall and some other leftover building materials as well: glassblock for repairs, leftover drywall and studs. These will definitely give us a jump start on the first couple of weeks...we may not be tent city for as long as I thought.

Roof Top Views

Sunset with a beer after a day of loading a container. Who could ask for more.


Clean out



The pallette jack is my new best friend. We cleaned out the space today, by equal parts scavenging and dumpster loading. The products left by the previous tenant (baby photo albums, foot print plaster kits, etc.) were a HUGE hit with the folks that work in the building.

Andrea and Marion rocked the house. I kinda love shutting up and working

Tuesday, October 16, 2007

colors


I told you it was pretty. Sunset side to Skyline meet blue dusk.

Monday, October 15, 2007

The site



The building is on the borderline of Long Island City and Sunnyside, Queens. It is mostly occupied by textiles shops, each floor holding 2 shops. Our unit was leased by a tableware designer as the full 1/2 floor, subsequently divided up. Softbox was previously rented by a gift ware company for the past 6 years. There are several other smaller units leased out by artists with varying degrees of "live" in "live/work." The complex does not feel like the Soho warehouses of the 1960s which allowed a "marginal" existence, according to my sculpture prof Robert Morris. Rather, it has a feeling of entrepreneurial creative enterprise; potentially a necessary condition at this point to sustain space in New York.

Softbox rocks

Welcome to Softbox. Softbox is a 1600 square foot warehouse space in Queens, New York which came to me rough but will hopefully in phases come together as a live work/studio space as well as a testing ground for future projects.



The building is classic box warehouse with glass block window walls. I have been subletting a smaller unit on the same floor for the last couple of months. The glass block distorts and clarifies the color of light, making the room feel like a softbox.




It should be a slow moving and flexible project. I see it as progressing in phases, from the immediate clean up and temporary (tent city) phase to providing studio space for several friends, and eventually additions of plumbing and more permanent structures. Stay tuned...