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Posts Tagged ‘furniture’

Photo: Michael Townsend.
The documentary Secret Mall Apartment includes real-life footage from an early-2000s experiment in which eight artists secretly created a living area in Providence Place mall in Rhode Island.

My husband and I recently saw a fascinating documentary — rough on production values because the camera was mostly handheld, but utterly fascinating. It’s about a mall in Providence that I got to know pretty well in the off hours when I needed a sheltered place for my early walk, when the only other people around might be shop employees or panhandlers and there was nothing to buy but coffee.

At Ocean State Media, Pamela Watts wrote about what else was going on at the mall.

“It’s one of the most improbable episodes ever to come out of Rhode Island,” she wrote, “and now it’s a documentary playing at movie theaters nationwide. The film, Secret Mall Apartmentreveals how a local artist and seven friends lived inside Providence Place Mall, undetected, for years.

“Rhode Island art teacher Michael Townsend is the mastermind behind the outrageous plot to reclaim empty industrial space and turn it into a clandestine clubhouse.

“Townsend was living in artist studio apartments near Providence Place in 2003 when developers informed residents their mill residences would be torn down as part of a revitalization plan for the capital city.

“ ‘We lost a home. We gained the home, but in the act of gaining the home, we had to do a little bit of trespassing. OK, a lot of trespassing,’ admits Townsend.

“ ‘When the mall was being built, I saw a space where I could not figure out what it would be used for, and we went looking for that anomaly in the architecture, snuck ourselves in, took out our flashlights and there it was,’ said Townsend.

“He said they gained access through an unlocked door at the back of the mall. Inside, the urban explorers discovered stairwells and crevices all leading them from the mall to their hideout. They smuggled in furniture and the space was equipped with electricity via an extension cord plugged into the mall.

” ‘I had a habit that whenever we were there for any amount of time and we knew we were using electricity, I would always go to where the mall offices were. And I would put a $20 bill in an envelope that said, “Thank you for the resources.” And I would slide under the door,’ Townsend said.

“For four years, even with security cameras, they never got caught. ‘We spent a lot of time in the mall, so we understood the rhythms of where people were walking, where the cameras were. Most of our actions always happen in broad daylight. That’s the best time to do things because that’s when crime doesn’t happen,’ Townsend said.

“But in 2007, their crime was uncovered by two young security guards, who actually used the mall apartment a few times before informing their superiors. ‘I will say the Providence Police did find it hilarious, they were deeply amused by it,’ said Townsend.

“He was charged with misdemeanor trespassing, received a suspended sentence and was banned from ever entering the mall again. Now, eighteen years later the documentary using video footage Townsend recorded of their escapade is the basis for the new film. And Providence Place allowed Townsend back in, to receive a hero’s welcome at the mall’s cinema for the premiere.”

More at Ocean State Media, here, at Architectural Digest, here, and the Providence Journal, here.

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Photo: NBC Boston
Project Home Again helps low-income families get on their feet again with furniture from donors such as movie companies finished with their stage sets.

I love writing about experiments that someone has thought up to help people in need. Usually the initiatives blossom and flourish, like the one I will tell you about today. But now is as good a time as any to admit that occasionally an experiment fails (consider one I wrote about helping displaced miners learn coding). I guess, for me, the bottom line is that you have to risk failure in order to move forward. No successes without failures.

In Lawrence and Andover, Mass., success seems to follow each new effort that Project Home Again tries out.

As Judith Kogan reported at WGBH, “When a film is made, sets are built and decorated to make a story seem real. And now in Massachusetts, when filming is done, those sets are having real-life impact, empowering people trying to rebuild their lives to design their own homes, free of charge. …

” ‘Say we’re decorating a dining room,’ explained Melissa Cooperman, a set decorator and buyer for films and commercials shot in Massachusetts. ‘We’ll need a table, we’ll need chairs, carpet, dishes, glasses, artwork for the wall, lighting, curtains, and window treatments.’

“When a film wraps, the producer needs to decide what to do with the accumulated stuff, often an abundance of home goods.

“Cooperman worked on the 2014 television mini-series ‘Olive Kitteridge,’ which was shot on the North Shore and Cape Ann. It had a fully-furnished house and apartment, and fully-stocked drug store.

“ ‘They said they wanted to donate everything,’ Cooperman recalled. …

“Project Home Again gets goods to where they’re most needed and wanted, partnering with about 400 social workers, founder and president Nancy Kanell said.”

Social workers ” ‘go to their clients’ homes with a checklist of everything that we stock. And they sit down with their clients and they go room by room, and decide what they need to make them feel comfortable,’ Kanell said. …

“Project Home Again serves refugees, veterans, people transitioning from halfway houses, and survivors of domestic violence.

“ ‘When they come here,’ Kanell said of the abuse survivors, ‘we roll out the red carpet.’ … Kanell remembers one particular survivor: ‘She came on a day we were closed because she was very afraid of her own shadow at that point. And she just wanted beige. She said she didn’t like color, didn’t deserve color.’

“Kanell and Cooperman found her a green chair.

“ ‘A green that people would be either very drawn to or very opposed to having in their home,’ Kanell recalled. ‘But there was something about it she liked. She sat down on it.’ …

“Kanell and Cooperman started pulling colorful rugs and a colorful table to go with the chair. …

“ ‘She was uncomfortable with it, but you could see she was starting to like it. And I made a deal with her that she could take it home, and if she didn’t like the color, I’d come and pick it up, and she could get all beige things. We even had colorful pots and pans for her! And she called about two weeks later. She said she and her son were so happy they were living in a colorful world, and it changed their outlook.’

“Project Home Again hasn’t just been changing lives. It’s changed the industry as well. Many set decorators now have Nancy Kanell on speed dial so they can get rid of their stuff as quickly as possible.” More here.

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Someone posted a chair by Jeffro Uitto on Facebook, and I had to know more.

Uitto’s About page says, “On the Washington coast there’s a place where nature’s leftovers get a second chance at stardom. The place is Knock on Wood, and Jeffro Uitto is the artist making the magic happen.

“Since high school Jeffro has been creating with wood, his favorite medium. This stuff isn’t from a lumber mill either. Each piece is found and rescued from the shores of Tokeland, the banks of Smith Creek, or the valleys between the Willapa Hills. In due time the varied sticks, slabs, and roots are cured and then found a fitting home. …

“Not everything is built right in the shop though. Clients have brought Jeffro on site to build one-off creations in places like Alaska and Hawaii.

“Jeffro’s shop is located near the historic Tokeland Hotel, a stone’s throw from Willapa Bay. … Visitors are surprised to see that many of Jeffro’s tools are hand made by the artist himself. After you get to know him, this isn’t surprising at all.”

Be sure to check out the amazing sculptures at Jeffro Uitto’s website, here.

Photos: Jeffro Uitto

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Melita has created some great exhibits. Sometimes she invites in speakers to expand on the topics. There was a secret service agent who talked about counterfeit money, a speaker from Crane & Co. whose family has made the U.S. currency paper for generations, and the FBI agent I blogged about here.

Her latest exhibit features handcrafted furniture from one of the top artisan schools in the world, North Bennet Street School.

Founded in 1885 to teach practical skills and English to poor immigrants, it has evolved into a range of activities, including a two-year program for those who want to get serious about jewelry making, carpentry, cabinet and furniture making, locksmithing, bookbinding, piano technology, or violin making. (More on the programs, here.)

The speakers for this exhibit gave an overview of the school and answered specific questions about furniture making.

One project that was described was second-year students’ assignment to make a writing desk and a chest of drawers to go in the Emily Dickinson Museum in Amherst. The museum wanted replicas because the originals are archived at Harvard.

Below you see the students with the originals and the carefully constructed replicas before the latter were sent for finishing.

I include a link to the jewelry making, since after all, this is a blog for Suzanne’s jewelry company, Luna & Stella.

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