projectionMAIL

Various Locations. 2009-present.

Projection system out of recycled materials

The Challenge:
Traditional art galleries can act as gatekeepers, emphasizing the perspectives of highly-trained artists and their clients while excluding the perspectives of underrepresented communities. To create a more inclusive platform, the IDC needed to break through the gallery walls and allow everyone to suggest where, when, and how a work should be viewed.

The Intervention In response, the IDC created projectionMAIL: a fully functional image projection system built for just $3 using cannibalized USPS flat-rate boxes, small magnifying glasses, and LED flashlights. Unlike static exhibits, these projectors were designed to be "stolen.” Gallery visitors are invited to take a box and relocate it to a site they deem more suitable, thus transferring the power of curation from the institution to the public.

The Impact The project transforms any urban surface into a canvas. By [re]positioning and [re]purposing the boxes, contributors create a nomadic infrastructure for exhibition, and social dialogue. What began as a single distribution point evolved into a global network of "guerrilla" screenings, where the relationship between the art and the site is constantly negotiated by the community.

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