If New York is where art goes to make its fortune, well then, Detroit
is where art comes to make its friends. Lucky for all the creative
stuff out there that the
UFO Factory is head of the city's welcoming committee.
A
three-person outfit who's M.O. is simply, "to do cool stuff," the UFO
Factory supports art for art's sake, not for profit or PR. Take their
installation currently holding court over at
MOCAD's "Considering Detroit"
exhibition. With nothing more than cardboard walls, silver paint, and a
disco ball, they've created a space where art is free to hang out—and
play nice with others.
"UFO
Factory is like the adult Zoot's," says Dion Fischer, one third of UFO.
He's referring to the days of the old coffee house on Second where he
met his other two partners in crime. "It wasn't about the moneymaking,"
he says. "It was more about the glory of art in the '90s."
For
all three members of the factory, that glory is what still keeps them
coming to "work" 10 years after the Zoot's era ended. Dressed in
different colored "factory-issue" jumpsuits complete with a UFO emblem,
they approach their mission with both a sense of duty—and comraderie.
"Dav
(Brainard) is head of engineering, I'm the science officer, and Warn
(Defever), well he's in charge," says Fischer of their respective red,
blue, and brown uniforms. "The worker bees, they're in navy blue."
The
group and their "bees" buzz around their temporary MOCAD space putting
the finishing touches on black, cardboard clouds, UFO art and a
homemade disco ball. The space even has a makeshift kitchen. All made
out of cardboard, of course. It's just the kind of set-up that makes
you wanna stick around and hang. Maybe even throw up a few of your own
cardboard creations.
As the room grows warmer with paint and
purpose, Warn Defever, the boss in brown, brings out a small wooden
block with flattened metal keys. It's an African kalimba, or thumb
piano. They've made hundreds of them. They've had performances based on
them. They've even been teaching DPS students how to play. And, it's as
far from any big money music scene that you could get.
"Nobody's good at it" says Defever, laughing. "But the edge is if you're good at sending text messages."
Bringing UFO to marketEven
though the UFO Factory is holding court at MOCAD through the end of
July, the real factory is housed in an Eastern Market warehouse on
Division and Russell behind a purple door. It was born after a friend's
going away party last July.
"Once
the silver paint was up, everything fell into place," says Fischer. And
similar to the space it occupies for the summer, it's part gallery and
part live venue. "This is UFO uptown," he says, motioning around to the
MOCAD space. "It focuses on details and has no doors. The real UFO
Factory is downtown…and has no admission," he explains. "But both,
they're made of cardboard."
He goes on to say that they're
enjoying being over at MOCAD (if not in part to the free utilities) and
will be putting on some 10 events scheduled summer Saturdays.
Look for the "Infinity People vs. Frog people vs. Forest People"
show coming up, and a closing show on robot art and paintings appropriately named: "Robot Heart."
At the end of July, too, expect a bit of field trip when the 15th year
of NOISE CAMP sets up over at the Contemporary Art Institute Detroit (
CAID) space on Rosa Parks. "It's like camping. Only with cardboard trees and electronic noise," says Fischer.
So
even though no one is addressing the UFO building and the conspiracy
surrounding the secret back door in both of their spaces, you get the
feeling that these three long-time friends really just are concerned
with wanting to do cool stuff. And in the process, they are, very
ironically, giving the city something that's easily identifiable—a
sense of inclusion in a traditionally exclusive scene.
"The
UFO Factory will continue til the jig is up," Fischer says, continuing
to cut out UFO-shaped stencils. Then he breaks a smile. "Which might be
tomorrow, so we've gotta keep working."
Visit
www.ufofactory.com or
www.mocadetroit.org for more info and a schedule of upcoming summer events.
Photos:
'UFO uptown"
Photographs by Marvin Shaouni
Marvin Shaouni is the managing photographer for Metromode & Model D.
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