Grab A Hammer
Building a backyard theater: The Aurora Picture Show turns movies into acommunity barn raising
A few hot glue gun blisters and X-Acto knife cuts were a small price to pay to share in Aurora Picture Show's temporary backyard theater crowdsourced design process.
Actually, I am quite proud of the artsy battlefield scars that evince that schemes that emerge during the consumption of beer and pizza may be included in the finished project, set to be completed during the Menil Community Arts Festival Saturday and used that same evening to screen movies.
It didn't take long before an inquisitive mashup of 20 or so personalities unleashed creative juices using fishing line, balsa wood panels, rods and tarp at "Brainstorming, Beer and Pizza" Wednesday night.
Made up of Michael Sarff and Tim Whidden, the New York-based art collaborative MTAA (M.River & T.Whid Art Associates) was commissioned to engage friends in both Brooklyn, New York and among Aurora's local groupies in Houston to contribute ideas for a mock-up of some sort of architecture marvel to be erected in the company's backyard.
"In the end, it's about building a space to show movies to each other where the process also fosters getting people together to collaborate actively."
As Aurora strives to broaden the cinematic experience, the partnership with MTAA extended that awareness to challenge notions of the physical space required to shoot and screen media.
Think: Would the theater have windows, screens, seats, a bar for beer (a must for Aurora's associate director Rachel Blackney Tepper), sound, rope lighting, greenery, barricades, planters, a stage? Would it be modular? And made of which materials?
The exploration of those particulars began in Sarff's living room in March. The Brooklyn experiment wasn't intended to craft a model to be duplicated in Houston, but to study the mechanics — the nuts and bolts — of communal building with a nod to old-fashion barn raisings. The steps are chronicled in MTAA's Universal Backyard Theater (UBT) blog.
"In the end, it's about building a space to show movies to each other where the process also fosters getting people together to collaborate actively," Sarff says.
Initially, the plan called for the theater to become a permanent addition to the premises. But with Aurora set to move to Molly Gochman's studio this summer, the UBT will host films for one night only — this Saturday.
Among some of the more whimsical contributions were hanging planters, banquettes, raised platforms, lounge chairs, angled roof lines, a happy face UBT sign and wall art.
"The films that will be screened on Saturday night are from people who have participated in the brainstorming sessions both in Brooklyn and in Houston," Mary Magsamen, Aurora's staff curator, says.
"Some of the films will be looping and projected onto surfaces of the UBT and some of the films will be presented as more of a traditional screening setup within the UBT."
Among some of the more whimsical contributions were hanging planters, banquettes, raised platforms, rocking lounge chairs, angled roof lines, a happy face graphic sign and wall art.
Sarff is currently in the midst of putting together the building's foundation and structural elements with bamboo, plywood, Tyvek, airline cable, clotheslines, tarp and two-by-fours. Anyone inclined to lend a hand to hammer, nail, glue and screw is welcome through Saturday (building will continue from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday with the movies screening at 8 p.m.).
After the screenings, the temporary backyard theater will be taken down and its parts donated to be reused.