When it's my birthday, I like to indulge myself, and one of my favourite ways is to take a daytrip. Preferably without doing the driving. I was pondering what to do this year - or what I could do for little money with a baby in tow - when I serendipitously stumbled across a posting at the Scrap Exchange - already one of my favourite places in the world - about the Elsewhere Artist Collaborative in Greeensboro, NC. Short version of the Elsewhere story via their site:
In 1939, Joe and Sylvia Gray began selling furniture imports at 606 and 608 South Elm Street in downtown Greensboro, NC. Following WWII, the furniture business transformed into a Surplus Store catalog company, mending used army goods and selling them to Boy Scout troops across the country. After Joe’s unexpected death in 1955, Sylvia began to stock surplus fabric, clothing, and eventually general thrift items such as toys, books, housewares, and knick-knacks. Shopping daily, Sylvia’s collection increasingly became an unmanageable mass stored in boxes and piles throughout the three-story building. The astounding accumulation amassed over her lifetime remained in a seemingly chaotic heap after Sylvia’s death in 1997.
Inspired by the potential for these “found objects” as artistic resource, George Scheer (Sylvia’s grandson) recruited fellow artists and friends to begin excavating Sylvia’s old store in May 2003. As the reorganization of Sylvia’s collection took form, local support increased, and the artist-residency program expanded, a living museum created by a collaborating community of artists flourished.
What I loved most about this place was how the Grandson could have sold it off piece by piece on Ebay but is committed to a place where money isn't the point - where donations are nice, but there's no entry fee. Where the glass cases of a museum are removed and the public can touch and when invited, rearrange and recreate the collection. The day we were there, they were "archiving" all their vintage clothes by invinting people to don whatever they fancied and have their portraits taken. We dressed Simone up in old velvet kiddie dresses and feather hats and posed and posed. There was a communal kitchen in back for the artists-in-residence and a garden planted in the alleyway. Events and posters and plans and lots and lots of creative juice just flowing all over the place. Please apply for a residency there and I will come visit you.
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